Germany temporarily shuts embassy in South Sudan amid fears of civil war

South Sudan's United Nations peacekeeping chief, Nicholas Haysom, has also said he is concerned the country is "on the brink of relapse into civil war".
Germany has temporarily closed its embassy in South Sudan's capital Juba because of rising tensions that have brought the East African country to the verge of civil war, the German foreign ministry said on Saturday.
South Sudan President Salva Kiir this week sacked the governor of Upper Nile state, where clashes have escalated between government troops and an ethnic militia he accuses of allying with his rival, First Vice President Riek Machar.
More To Read
- Aid blockade in South Sudan puts 60,000 malnourished children in Upper Nile at risk
- UN extends South Sudan peace mission for a year as renewed conflict looms
- Attack on MSF hospital in South Sudan was deliberate, UN rights commission says
- Bombing destroys last functional health facility in Jonglei State, South Sudan
- UN extends South Sudan peacekeeping mission by nine days amid escalating tensions
- South Sudan peace deal under threat as key opposition leaders detained
The standoff has heightened concerns that the world's newest nation could slide back into conflict some seven years after it emerged from a civil war that killed hundreds of thousands of people.
"After years of fragile peace, South Sudan is once again on the brink of civil war," the German foreign ministry wrote on x.
"President Kiir and Vice President Machar are plunging the country into a spiral of violence. It's their responsibility to end this senseless violence & finally implement the peace agreement."
South Sudan's United Nations peacekeeping chief, Nicholas Haysom, has also said he is concerned the country is "on the brink of relapse into civil war".
Top Stories Today
- Farmaajo accuses Somali president of deepening crisis through constitutional breaches
- Environmentalists raise alarm over hotel being built in Ngong Road Forest
- Petition filed to halt vetting of Ruto’s IEBC nominees over alleged irregularities
- Gachagua drops pre-impeachment cases, shifts focus to overturning ouster in court
- RSF drone strikes cut power in Khartoum as war escalates
- Wajir residents want state to prioritise water, roads in upcoming budget
- New US Bill proposes taxing money sent by Kenyans living abroad
- Afreximbank launches Sh129bn funding kitty to empower African creatives
- Duale: Kenya to receive BCG, polio vaccines next month
- IG of Police warns budget cut will cripple operations amid security threats
- State blames Gachagua’s "unpaid" supporters for chaos at DCP party launch
- Muslims urged to prioritise helping the poor over Mecca pilgrimage
- Four fishermen killed in Turkana by suspected Ethiopian militia
- South Sudan denies rumours of President Kiir's death
- Public health facilities to pay KEMSA directly under new SHA system
- 78 foreigners arrested, 58 guns seized in the past three months in Isiolo
- Kenya leads Africa in nurse migration to US, new report shows
- ICT CS ordered to appoint Nzau Musau, Lucy Minayo to Media Complaints Commission
- Nairobi Expressway section to close from Friday for maintenance works
- Law students caught in crossfire of policy conflicts, budget cuts