South Sudan: Friendship Over Fear (Video)

South Sudan: Friendship Over Fear (Video)

Monday, July 17, 2017

A civil war that has plagued South Sudan, the world’s newest country, over the past four years verges on ethnic genocide and has left half the prewar population in need of humanitarian aid. As the international community tries to help end the violence, the U.S. Institute of Peace brought two of the country’s promising young leaders—one from each side of the divide—to Washington to pursue research on ways to heal the rifts. By the end of their stay, they may have learned just as much from each other.

Type: In the Field

YouthDemocracy & Governance

South Sudan: Looming Genocide, Plans for Prevention

South Sudan: Looming Genocide, Plans for Prevention

Thursday, December 15, 2016

By: Fred Strasser

The likelihood that South Sudan will descend into genocide and mass starvation is growing by the day, say diplomats, advocates and journalists familiar with the central African nation. Violence has spread to previously peaceful regions, propelled by a political breakdown that increasingly is becoming a clash of ethnic groups. Efforts to mediate between the government and the armed opposition have collapsed. Action by the U.S. and the international community is needed urgently to prevent furth...

Type: Analysis and Commentary

Conflict Analysis & PreventionHuman RightsFragility & ResilienceDemocracy & Governance

South Sudan War Calls for Firm Intervention, Lyman Says

South Sudan War Calls for Firm Intervention, Lyman Says

Wednesday, September 7, 2016

By: Viola Gienger

A peace plan for South Sudan that was intended to end three years of fighting in the world’s newest nation has failed largely because it “depends on the cooperation of the very antagonists who brought about the current civil war,” former U.S. Special Envoy to Sudan and South Sudan Princeton Lyman told a House Foreign Affairs subcommittee today.

Type: Analysis and Commentary

Conflict Analysis & PreventionGlobal PolicyHuman Rights

To Save South Sudan, Put it on Life Support

To Save South Sudan, Put it on Life Support

Wednesday, July 20, 2016

By: Kate Almquist Knopf

South Sudan marked its fifth anniversary as a state this month not with celebrations but with rival armed factions shooting at each other in the streets of the capital. Several hundred people were killed in less than a week, tens of thousands displaced, and even sacrosanct U.N. camps protecting civilians were attacked. South Sudan ceased to perform even the minimal functions and responsibilities of a sovereign state long ago, and today the likelihood of a larger pogrom and escalating civil war is high.

Type: Analysis and Commentary

Mediation, Negotiation & DialogueHuman RightsGlobal Policy