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From: Small Arms Survey <[email protected]>
Date: Fri, 19 May 2017 at 14:53
Subject: New report from Small Arms Survey: The end of the ARCSS and new
conflict in Greater Equatoria
To: <[email protected]>


Following fighting in Juba in July 2016 and Riek Machar’s flight into the
Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), the peace agreement between the
Government of South Sudan and opposition forces has not only collapsed but
has led to new conflict in Greater Equatoria, along the DRC border,
according to a new report from the Small Arms Survey.

*Spreading fallout: The collapse of the ARCSS and new conflict along the
Equatorias-DRC border*
<http://smallarmssurvey.us9.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=f825e06204d5b6ec1997aed09&id=3f4c304be1&e=b3e6d4db9c>,
a new *Issue Brief* from the Survey’s Human Security Baseline Assessment
(HSBA) for Sudan and South Sudan, documents the period following July 2016
when then vice-president Riek Machar, leader of the Sudan People’s
Liberation Movement/Army-in-Opposition (SPLM/A-IO), and hundreds of his
forces fled Juba and reached Garamba National Park across the border in the
DRC. Machar and his men were eventually airlifted by the United Nations
Organization Stabilization Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
(MONUSCO) from there to camps in the DRC, where many of them remain.

President Salva Kiir subsequently installed Taban Deng Gai as vice
president, to which the international community largely assented—thereby
isolating Machar in exile and effectively ending the prospects of the
Agreement on the Resolution of the Conflict in South Sudan (ARCSS), the
deeply flawed peace agreement that had enjoyed almost no political support
from the government since its signature in August 2015.

Spreading fallout documents the further effects of the agreement’s
collapse, with a focus on the growing unrest in Greater Equatoria. Taking
advantage of cross-border ethnic ties, rising ethno-nationalism, and
friendly DRC authorities, armed opposition groups are using DRC territory
for transit and rear activities. They are also engaging in at least some
recruitment among Congolese and South Sudanese on DRC territory. Meanwhile
there is a risk of conflicts in Greater Equatoria intensifying, as the
armed opposition forces continue to converge but also risk splintering.
Against a backdrop of a shattered peace process, there is no foreseeable
end to the conflicts in South Sudan.


Key findings include the following:

   - The Addis Ababa peace process and the ARCSS itself were deeply flawed,
   resulting in a low chance of success combined with significant risks in the
   event of failure. President Salva Kiir’s supporters fiercely resisted the
   agreement and remain unwilling to give up their monopoly on power in
   exchange for national stability.
   - The ARCSS’s security provisions and the agreement’s collapse
   contributed significantly to the spread of South Sudan’s civil war into
   Greater Equatoria. The cantonment provisions in particular led to a surge
   in opposition mobilization under the banner of the SPLM/A-IO.
   - The SPLA’s pursuit of Machar pushed him and his men into DRC territory
   in a state of extreme deprivation and malnutrition, resulting in both a
   humanitarian crisis and a new security risk for the DRC. Prolonged
   deliberations within the UN system as to how to handle the combatants gave
   them time to return their weapons to the South Sudanese conflict rather
   than fully disarm.
   - The UN extracted the SPLA-IO combatants who had fled to the DRC in the
   midst of a rapid change in Machar’s political status. When the extraction
   started in mid-August 2016 international and regional actors remained
   officially united in recognizing Machar as part of the peace process. By
   the time the extractions ended in mid-September he was marginalized,
   diplomatically isolated, and being pressured into exile.
   - In the absence of any political process to end the conflict in South
   Sudan, there are no clear solutions for the SPLA-IO combatants in MONUSCO
   care. Hundreds of South Sudan’s best trained, most disciplined, and most
   aggrieved fighters remain stuck unhappily in insecure UN custody in one of
   the DRC’s most volatile regions.
   - The SPLM/A-IO has established a new headquarters in Lasu near the DRC
   border, where it has established relations with DRC officials. Remnants of
   South Sudan’s Arrow Boys’ rebellion have crossed into the DRC and
   established a threatening presence near refugee camps. Kinshasa has little
   capacity or political will to proactively engage with or contain the
   fallout from South Sudan’s growing crisis.
   - The collapse of the ARCSS dissolved the only working consensus among
   regional and international actors on how to resolve South Sudan’s civil
   war. In the resultant policy vacuum, conflicts in Greater Equatoria along
   the DRC border can be expected to continue and likely escalate, with the
   risk of an intensifying war that continues to spread into the wider region.

Download HSBA Issue Brief 28, Spreading fallout: The collapse of the ARCSS
and new conflict along the Equatorias-DRC border
<http://smallarmssurvey.us9.list-manage.com/track/click?u=f825e06204d5b6ec1997aed09&id=939206c1b6&e=b3e6d4db9c>.
This Issue Brief is written by independent researcher and analyst Alan
Boswell, based on fieldwork in South Sudan and the DRC in November and
December 2016.

For questions, comments on content, or feedback, please contact:
Emile LeBrun
HSBA for Sudan and South Sudan
Small Arms Survey
[email protected] <[email protected]>
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