UN says 2 local humanitarian workers killed in South Sudan

AP  |  Johannesburg 

The two aid workers have been killed in separate attacks over the weekend in civil war-torn South Sudan, the said today.

A statement says armed men shot at a "clearly marked" aid vehicle near Bentiu town in Unity state, killing a with the Hope Restoration organisation. And a with the UNIDO organization was killed near Leer town in Unity state.

They are the first two aid workers to be killed this year in South Sudan, which is one of the world's most dangerous places for aid workers. At least 98 have been killed since the fighting began in December 2013, most of them local workers.

The UN also says seven local workers with the aid organization were abducted March 25 by opposition forces while delivering health supplies in county in Central Equatoria.

The UN is demanding their unconditional release.

The opposition says the aid workers weren't abducted but were taken because they didn't have "proper clearance." "Our investigation says some of them are government agents," told The Associated

He said they were trying to "clear the case" so the workers can be released.

In November, ordered unimpeded access for aid organizations throughout the country but attacks have persisted.

Rights groups have called on all sides in the conflict to protect civilians and aid workers.

"The brutal killing and abductions of aid workers are possible war crimes and should not be tolerated," Jehanne Henry, for Human Rights Watch, told the AP.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, April 10 2018. 22:20 IST