South Sudan bishop decries media indifference as
violence continues
(Vatican Radio) “Notwithstanding a return to calm in the
South Sudanese city of Yei, those living in rural areas continue to die
immersed in the deafening silence of the media and before the indifferent gaze
of the international community.”
This dramatic statement was made by Catholic Bishop
Erkolano Lodu Tombe of Yei in Equatoria region, South
Sudan.
Bishop Lodu Tombe was speaking to “Radio Easter” in Juba,
and the interview was reported on in the Vatican “Osservatore Romano”
newspaper.
He said that the country has been hit by a wave of murders
and massacres, which are believed to have been carried out by mixed
military-civilian groups that target suspected supporters of the former vice
president, Riek Machar.
Lodu Tombe said that hundreds of people have lost their
lives in violent attacks in villages on the outskirts of Yei and said they are
dying also due to lack of food and medicine.
He said the population lives in constant fear of new waves
of violence. He decried the lack of security on the roads and said that
villagers are unable to reach the city of Yei and farmers are unable to travel
to their fields to be able to cultivate them.
The bishop says the population therefore will be forced to
rely on humanitarian assistance throughout the coming year because there are no
crops.
He explained that his own Diocese of Yei includes nine
parishes located across Yei River State and in villages of Amadi State:
“unfortunately only two parishes are functioning. In the others the priests are
unable to care for the Christian communities due to the wave of violence that
exploded last July and that continues to endanger both the population and the
priests”.
The UN Human Rights Council this month warned that South
Sudan is "on the brink of an all-out ethnic civil war which could
destabilise the entire region".
After a recent mission to the nation, the head of a team of
UN human rights investigators described a shattered country where children as
young as two have been raped and she urged immediate deployment of a 4,000-strong
regional protection force "to protect civilians all across South
Sudan".
Bishop Lodu Tombe said the people of South Sudan are
exhausted and together with the Catholic Church and other religious confessions
appeal for an end to hostilities and the restoration of peace in the country.
“We appeal to all parties in the conflict for peace” said
Bishop Lodu Tombe “and at the same time we thank the Government for its efforts
to establish order”.
At the moment the only two operational parishes in Yei
Diocese are those of Christ the King Cathedral and Sacred Heart Parish-Lomin.
Father Emmanuel Lodongo Sebit, General Secretary of
the Diocese said that “instability and lack of security do not allow for parish
activities or for the assistance of people in difficulty.”
Father Lodongo said all the other parishes have been looted
and destroyed and many Christians have been forced to flee.
During Christmas Mass Bishop Lodu Tombe and Father Lodongo
exhorted all South Sudanese to intensify their commitment to work for peace in
Africa’s youngest nation.
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