The United States proposed on Sunday that the United Nations Security Council authorize a 4,000-strong force to ensure peace in South Sudan's capital Juba and threaten to impose an arms embargo if the transitional government does not cooperate.
It circulated a draft resolution to the 15-member council, seen by Reuters, that would approve a regional
protection force "to use all necessary means, including undertaking robust and active steps and engaging in direct operations where necessary," to secure Juba and protect the airport and other key facilities.
The
protection force would be part of the U.N. peacekeeping mission in
South Sudan, known as UNMISS, which has been on the ground since the
country gained independence from Sudan in 2011. The protection force
chief would report to the UNMISS commander.
The council will vote on whether to impose an arms embargo if U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon
reports within a month of adoption of the draft resolution that South
Sudan's transitional government is obstructing deployment of the
protection force.
Heavy fighting involving tanks and helicopters erupted in Juba for several days last month between troops loyal to President Salva Kiir and those backing former Vice President Riek Machar, raising fears of a return to full-scale civil war in the world's newest nation.
Hundreds
of people were killed and the United Nations said government soldiers
and security forces executed civilians and gang-raped women and girls
during and after the outbreak of fighting. South Sudan rejected the
accusations.
East African bloc IGAD said on Friday
that South Sudan had agreed to the deployment of a regional force,
which has been a key demand of Machar, who left Juba in the wake of the
violence. Kiir has since appointed a new vice president.
The draft resolution "urges
member states in the region to expedite contributions of rapidly
deployable troops to ensure the full deployment of the Regional
Protection Force as soon as possible."
The
draft text would extend the mandate for UNMISS until Dec. 15. The
Security Council needs to adopt the draft by Friday, when the current
UNMISS mandate expires.
South Sudan descended into
civil war after Kiir first dismissed Machar as his deputy. They signed a
peace deal in August 2015, but implementation was slow.
The
Security Council has threatened for some 18 months to impose an arms
embargo on South Sudan. The United States has overcome an initial
reluctance, while Russia and China, who have been opposed to an arms
embargo on the oil producing country, have signaled they now are willing
to consider it.
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