US evacuation flight fired on by South Sudan rebels
US service members
injured after aircraft fired on by rebels in South Sudan
Rebel fire hit two US military
aircraft responding to the outbreak in violence in South Sudan on Saturday,
wounding three US service members and heavily damaging at least one of the
aircraft, officials said.
South Sudan blamed the
attack on renegade troops in control of the breakaway region.
The US
evacuation flights were heading to Bor, the capital of the state of Jonglei and
scene of some of the nation's worst violence over the last week. One American
service member was reported to be in critical condition. Officials said after
the aircraft took incoming fire, they turned around and headed to Kampala,
Uganda. From there the service members were flown on to Nairobi, Kenya for
medical treatment, the officials said.
Both officials demanded anonymity to share information not yet made public.
Both officials work in East Africa and are in a position to know the
information. It was not immediately known what the U.S. aircraft were doing in
Bor. One official said it appeared the aircraft were Ospreys, the type of
aircraft that can fly like a helicopter and a plane.
Officials at
the US military's Africa Command did not immediately answer phone calls or
emails on Saturday.
South Sudan's military
spokesman, Col. Philip Aguer, said that government troops are not in control of
Bor, so the attack on the US aircraft has to be blamed on renegade soldiers, he
said.
"Bor is under the
control of the forces of Riek Machar," Aguer said.
South Sudan President
Kiir, an ethnic Dinka, said this week that an attempted coup triggered the
violence now pulsing through South Sudan. He blamed the former vice president,
Machar, an ethnic Nuer. But officials have since said a fight between Dinka and
Nuer members of the presidential guard triggered the initial violence late
Sunday night. Machar's ouster from the country's No. 2 political position
earlier this year had stoked ethnic tensions.
The violence has
killed hundreds and has world leaders worried that a full-blown civil war could
ignite in South Sudan. The south fought a decades-long war with Sudan before a
2005 peace deal resulted in a 2011 referendum that saw South Sudan break away
from the north, taking most of the region's oil wealth with it.
An International
Crisis Group expert on South Sudan told The Associated Press on Friday that
rebels have taken control of at least some of South Sudan's oil fields, an
issue that could bring Sudan into the conflict. South Sudan's oil flows north
through Sudan's pipelines, providing Khartoum with much needed income.
The UN Security
Council on Friday said the weeklong violence resulted from a "political
dispute among the country's political leaders" that could affect not only
South Sudan, but neighboring countries and the entire region.
President Barack Obama earlier this week dispatched U.S. troops to help
protect the US Embassy in the capital, Juba. The U.S. Embassy organized at
least five emergency evacuation flights to help US citizens leave the country. Other
countries like Britain, Germany and Italy also helped citizens evacuate.
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