Rights group concerned over South Sudan opposition officials' disappearance


Photo: Aggrey Idri (Lelft), Dong Samuel (Right)/ Facebook
Photo: Aggrey Idri (Lelft), Dong Samuel (Right)/ Facebook

Human Rights Watch has expressed its concerned about the lack of news
on the fate of human right lawyer Dong Samuel Luak and Aggrey Idri
Izbon, both senior members of South Sudan’s armed opposition, who went
missing from the Kenyan capital in January.

The two men are believed to have been abducted by or at the request of
South Sudan officials and taken illegally to South Sudan, where they
are likely to have been abused as the ones earlier detained.

In a statement issued on Monday, Human Rights Watch, said: “three
months, 90 days, more than two thousand hours without news of Dong
Samuel Luak, a well-known South Sudanese activist, and Aggrey Idris,
an opposition official, who disappeared off the streets of Nairobi on
January 23 and 24.”

The rights body said it has documented clear patterns of arbitrary
detentions, abuse, and torture by military and national security
actors in South Sudan.

According to Human Rights Watch, credible sources said both Luak and
Idris were detained in the Juba headquarters of South Sudan’s National
Security Service (NSS) on January 26, two days after they were
forcibly disappeared from Nairobi and a day before the High Court of
Kenya ruled against their deportation.

It further said the sources indicated that the two men were held in
the NSS headquarters in Juba for a few nights and then transferred
elsewhere, the right group added that The two men’s  current
whereabouts remain unknown.

However, since their disappearance, neither the Kenyan nor South
Sudanese authorities have responded to questions about the two men’s
fate.

Days earlier, the South Sudanese minister of information, Michael
Makuei, denied that they were in the custody of South Sudanese
security forces.

“Luak and Idris’ forcible disappearance shows that South Sudanese
actors are willing to cross borders to silence critics. This is an
especially worrying development considering how many human rights
activists and civil society leaders have had to flee South Sudan since
the war started,” said the rights body.

Since the war started in South Sudan in 2013, the US-based Human
Rights Watch said it has documented cases of enforced disappearances,
defined as the detention and subsequent denial of detention by
authorities, especially in the Equatoria and Western Bahr el-Ghazal
regions where the South Sudan government has been pursuing abusive
counterinsurgency campaigns, including against people presumed to
support the opposition.

The rights group called upon the international actors, including the
African Union and Kenya to ensure that South Sudan’s government
immediately investigates the case, produce and release the disappeared
men, and investigate and hold to account those responsible.
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