South Sudan’s next generation in a hurry to fight

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South Sudan’s next generation in a hurry to fight

The Guardian, 12 Nov 2014

URL: http://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2014/nov/12/south-sudan-child-soldiers-fighting-war
The boys skipping under the limp yellow string and ragged red flag that officially separates rebel-held South Sudan and Ethiopia escaped massacres, starvation and disease to seek shelter and safety across the border after a weeks-long walk that claimed many lives.

Despite food rations and fears of an imminent famine in South Sudan, they want to go back and fight, just as soon as the rebels will take them.

“Now I’m too small,” says 13-year-old Lajar, surveying his hands. “I’m just waiting to grow so I can go.”

More than 2 million people have fled their homes in South Sudan since fighting erupted in December.

The conflict was sparked by a long-standing enmity between South Sudan President Salva Kiir, from the country’s largest Dinka ethnic group, and his former deputy turned rebel leader Riek Machar, a Nuer, which quickly spread from the streets of Juba into an increasingly tribal conflict.

Around 200,000 South Sudanese have fled to Gambella – a remote rural region in western Ethiopia.

The US and regional heads are pushing the UN security council for sanctions against warring South Sudanese leaders to end the conflict, while rights groups are calling for an arms embargo.

But here, the talk is of arms airdrops and night raids of villages across the border for more child soldiers. It’s a far cry from the peace talks held in five-star hotels in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa, where leaders pay lip service to international donors, while buying weapons and time during the six-month rainy season, which is ending now.

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Meanwhile, some mothers at the nearby Kule refugee camp are just waiting for the roads to dry up so their sons and brothers can head back to battle.

Rebecca Nyadel, 33, survived a massacre in Urol, in South Sudan’s Jonglei state, and walked with her 12 children for 30 days eating “leaves that tasted of salt”, and passing piles of bodies to reach Ethiopia.

But in a war that has been marked by unprecedented levels of sexual violence, largely against children, Nyadel is willing to sacrifice her 18-year-old son to avenge what she considers the extermination of their people. “Death is normal. I’ll die. He will die. All of us do not need to be here and he can contribute,” she says.

Her nine-year-old daughter, Nyaruach, just wants to go back to school with her sisters so that she “can have a future”.

Nyaruach sobs as she explains how she has seen at least 30 neighbours killed. One, a pregnant woman, watched her children gunned down by soldiers, before she was killed. “I also saw the vehicles with guns on hitting people and driving over them,” she adds.

As the dry season begins, clashes are expected to increase.“We are here trusting the UN. If they don’t provide for those coming, we will have to go back and see if we survive, so we have to believe and trust in them,” says 40-year-old Andrew Kang, chairman of Kule’s refugee committee and a former child soldier.

Captured at 13 and forced to fight Khartoum government troops, he escaped and headed to Ethiopia on a long journey during which many boys died. Now, he is again dependent on the food and shelter that he hopes can stretch to the next wave of refugees.

MDG : South Sudane refugees in Gambella, Ethiopia
One of hundreds of South Sudanese refugee boys who have adopted the Ethiopian football kit. But most long to return to defend their homeland. Photograph: Hannah McNeish
But with more than 600,000 refugees making Ethiopia the largest host country on the continent, NGOs have neither the land nor resources to help possibly tens or hundreds of thousands more South Sudanese who are expected to pour over the border in the coming weeks and months.

“If there is an influx of refugees now, we will not be able to provide food to those that arrive in the next coming days or weeks,” says Abdou Dieng, country director for the UN’s World Food Programme in Ethiopia. The $10m a month for the 200,000 current refugees will run out in December.

More than 900 people arrived last week at Lietchor, a camp built in a hurry on a floodplain and now only accessible by helicopter. Another 500 will cross soon, but with nowhere to put them apart from on more floodplains, stories of babies drowning as their mothers collect meagre food rations look set to continue.

Despite education being a way to stop boys wanting to carry kalashnikovs instead of school books, it’s a far-off dream for what aid workers here call “a forgotten crisis”.

“I was going to school but now there is war everywhere so we have to do that instead,” says Lajar, strolling back to the camps arm in arm with one of the many other young boys waiting to defend their country.