South Sudan, UN end row over Juba airport

File photo: first batch of the regional protection force in Juba

South Sudan and the United Nations have agreed to break the deadlock after
a dispute over control of the airport in the capital Juba, a government
spokesman said on Monday.

The misunderstand started after the UN mission in South Sudan deployed its
Rwandan peacekeepers that arrived in Juba earlier this month as part of the
4,000 strong regional protection force to Thongpiny base near the Juba
International Airport.

The move prompted the government of South Sudan to suspend cooperation with
the world body and to ground aircrafts belonging to United Nations
peacekeepers saying the UN troops should immediately move to the Jebel base.

South Sudan’s Minister of Information Michael Makuei told reporters after a
meeting with foreign diplomats in Juba today that the issue was resolved
after the United Nations accepted to relocate its Rwandan peacekeepers to
the Jebel base.“The Rwandan contingent was deployed by UNMISS in the
Thongpiny camp near the airport. Of course that was not the place assigned
to them and the government intervened and told them to relocate these
forces from there to their rightful place. This is all that brought
misunderstanding,” he said.

Makuei revealed that the army chief General James Ajongo had suspended any
cooperation and coordination with the UN mission in South Sudan over the
deployment of regional protection near the airport.“As a result the
Security Council sat and we passed a resolution that yes we stand with the
Chief of Defense Forces and that UNMISS should be given 48 hours to leave,”
he said.

“Last week, we briefed David Shearer on that the Special Representative of
the Secretary General. We briefed him on that and after briefing him he
accepted that yes he will move out his forces,” he added.

The minister pointed out that the government of South Sudan lifted its ban
on UN flights on 18 August after David Shearer accepted to move his troops
to Jebel. “The clearance is not open if UNMISS wants to move, they follow
the right procedure,” he said.

Ethiopian Ambassador to South Sudan Fisseha Shawel Gebre said their meeting
with the government of South Sudan clarified the misunderstanding with the
UN mission in the country.“The government has resumed its full cooperation
but there are her and there negative propaganda and news against the
government, so we don’t want that to continue,” he said.

Shawl, who is also the IGAD representative in South Sudan, said the
government was only trying to put things right.In August 2016, the United
Nations Security Council following request by the East African regional
bloc IGAD approved the deployment of 4,000-strong regional protection force
to provide security in Juba.South Sudan’s government agreed after first
rejecting the regional protection force as a breach of the country’s
national sovereignty.

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