Airstrike kills at least 19 in South Sudan town, residents say
A South Sudanese general was among around 27 soldiers killed on March 7 when a U.N. helicopter trying to evacuate them from Nasir came under attack.
An airstrike by South Sudan's airforce killed at least 19 people in the country's east, residents said, less than two weeks after government forces withdrew from the area following intense fighting with an ethnic militia.
The clashes in Nasir, near the Ethiopian border, between national forces and the White Army, a loosely organised group mostly comprising armed ethnic Nuer youths, threatened to reignite the 2013-2018 civil war, in which hundreds of thousands of people died.
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The government accuses the party of First Vice President Riek Machar, a Nuer, of collaborating with the White Army, which fought alongside Machar's forces during the civil war against the predominantly ethnic Dinka troops loyal to President Salva Kiir. Machar's party has denied involvement.
A South Sudanese general was among around 27 soldiers killed on March 7 when a U.N. helicopter trying to evacuate them from Nasir came under attack.
South Sudan's Information Minister Michael Makuei told journalists at a news conference that the airforce bombed Nasir on Monday morning.
Kang Wan, a community leader in Nasir, said it happened late on Sunday night, and of the 19 dead, 15 were killed immediately, while the others later succumbed to their wounds. Another resident said they saw 16 bodies and that three others had died.
"All of them, they got burnt; everything got burnt," Wan told Reuters by telephone. "
Médecins Sans Frontières said its hospital in nearby Ulang received three wounded patients from Nasir on Monday morning.
"Two of them were declared dead on arrival due to the severe burns they had sustained," MSF said in a statement, giving no further details.
Nasir County Commissioner James Gatluak Lew, who is allied to Machar, said the South Sudanese armed forces were likely seeking revenge for the helicopter attack.
Last week, Uganda said it had deployed special forces in South Sudan's capital, Juba, to "secure it." The South Sudanese government at the time denied the presence of Ugandan troops in the country.
However, Makuei said in a statement that some Ugandan army units were in the country "to back up and support the (national) army according to their needs."
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