Article

Wednesday, March 12, 2025
search-icon

Uganda deploys special forces to South Sudan to protect govt as fears of civil war grow

publish time

11/03/2025

publish time

11/03/2025

NY556
South Sudan's president Salva Kiir, (left), and vice-president Riek Machar, (right), shake hands after meetings in Juba, South Sudan, on Oct 20, 2019, to discuss outstanding issues to the peace deal. (AP)

KAMPALA, Uganda, March 11, (AP): Uganda has deployed an unknown number of troops to South Sudan in a bid to protect the fragile government of President Salva Kiir as a tense rivalry with his deputy threatens a return to civil war in the east African nation. Ugandan special forces have been deployed to Juba, the South Sudanese capital, "to support the government of South Sudan" against a possible rebel advance on the city, said Maj Gen Felix Kulayigye, a spokesperson for the Ugandan military.

"We sent a force there two days ago,” he said. "We are not there for peacekeeping." In deploying Ugandan soldiers to Juba, Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni moved as a guarantor of the peace process that keeps Kiir and Machar together in a delicate government of national unity, Kulayigye told The Associated Press Tuesday.

Kiir and Museveni are allies, and Museveni has in the past intervened in the South Sudan conflict to keep Kiir in power. The deployment of Ugandan troops to South Sudan underscores rising tensions in the oil-producing country that has been plagued by political instability and violence since it gained independence from Sudan in 2011. The U.S. on Sunday ordered nonemergency government personnel to leave Juba.

The UN is warning of "an alarming regression that could erase years of hard-won progress” in South Sudan. The latest tensions stem from fighting in the country's north between government troops and a rebel militia, known as the White Army, that's widely believed to be allied with Machar. Last week a South Sudanese general was among several people killed when a United Nations helicopter on a mission to evacuate government troops from the town of Nasir, the scene of the fighting in Upper Nile state, was shot at.

Earlier in the week, after the White Army overran the military garrison in Nasir, government troops surrounded Machar’s home in Juba and several of his allies were arrested. Deputy army chief Gen. Gabriel Duop Lam, who is seen as loyal to Machar, was among those detained. Kiir had angered Machar’s group earlier in the year by firing officials seen as loyal to Machar, who has charged that "persistent violations through unilateral decisions and decrees threaten the very existence” of their peace pact.