US journalist killed in Yei River

Ayuen Panchol | August 27, 2017 | 9:44 amFreelance photojournalist/writer
Christopher Allen. (The War Zone Freelance Project)

A 26-year-old American journalist was killed in Kaya, Yei River State,
during fighting between government and opposition forces on Saturday, the
US Department of State has confirmed.

Christopher Allen was a freelance journalist who had worked for several
U.S. news outlets. He had been reportedly embedded with the opposition
forces in Sudan for a week before he was killed.

Reuters quoted SPLA Deputy Spokeesman Col. Domic Santo as saying Allen was
“”caught in the fighting” that left at least 15 dead.“We can confirm that
U.S. citizen Christopher Allen died in South Sudan on August 26, 2017 while
working as a journalist. We express our condolences to Mr. Allen’s family,”
it said in a statement.“The Embassy stands ready to provide all appropriate
consular assistance. Out of respect for Mr. Allen’s family, we have no
further comment at this time.”

Before working in South Sudan, Allen covered the war in Ukraine, according
to multiple media reports.He was one of the first journalists on the scene
after Russia-backed rebels there were blamed for shooting down a Malaysian
airliner, killing all 298 people aboard, said Pat Hughes, a friend of the
family’s and a former Inquirer copy editor.“He had a passion for telling
the stories of people touched by war,” she said. “He went to South Sudan
for the same reason all good journalists go to trouble spots: to get the
story and to bring that story to the world’s attention.”

The U.S. embassy confirmed the death of Christopher Allen and said his
family had been notified, Fox News reported. His body has been taken to the
military hospital in Juba.

Despite the signing of the Agreement for the Resolution of the Conflict in
South Sudan in August 2015, between the government and the armed
opposition, fighting continues to be reported in the country, particularly
Equatoria and Upper Nile regions.Fighting between government forces and the
IO in Juba reignited in July 2016.In the past year alone, over one million
civilians, many of them from villages in Equatoria region, have fled to
neighboring countries, according to the Human Rights Watch.The
international community has urged the South Sudanese leaders to implement
the peace deal.

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