South
Sudan clashes 'kill 400-500' after coup claim
UN diplomats said they had been
told by sources in the capital, Juba, that the death toll was between 400 and
500.
South Sudan has seen two days
of clashes following a reported coup attempt against President Salva Kiir.
The president of the UN
Security Council told the BBC there was "potential" for civil war.
Earlier, the government said 10
senior political figures, including the former finance minister, had been
arrested.
President Kiir said a group of
soldiers supporting former Vice-President Riek Machar had tried to take power
by force on Sunday night, but were defeated. He has ordered a dusk-to-dawn
curfew in the capital.
Details of the fighting have
been sketchy, but a meeting of the UN Security Council in New York on Tuesday
was told that the clashes were "apparently largely along ethnic
lines".
'Heavy toll'
French UN ambassador Gerard
Araud, who holds the rotating presidency of the Security Council, said up to
20,000 people had taken refuge in the UN mission in Juba.
He said the council had
received only "patchy information" in a briefing given by UN
peacekeeping chief Herve Ladsous.
·
Central figure in Sudanese and South Sudanese politics for three
decades
·
Member of South Sudan's second-largest ethnic group, the Nuer
·
Married UK aid worker Emma McCune in 1991 - she died two years
later in a car accident in Kenya while pregnant
·
Was a Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM) commander and
led a breakaway faction for some years in the 1990s
·
After 2005 peace deal appointed vice-president of interim
government, retaining the post after independence in 2011 until his dismissal
in July 2013
·
"Some reports are speaking
of hundreds of casualties. For the moment we can't confirm this, but in any
case it is a heavy toll," Mr Araud told the BBC.
He said the conflict had
"the potential of a civil war" between the two main ethnic groups,
the Dinka and the Nuer.
However, the governor of Unity
State, Simon Kun Pouch, was quoted on the government website as saying that the conflict had
nothing to do with tribes.
"There are people out
there saying what has happened is between the Dinka and the Nuer tribesmen. We
the leaders of this country would want to state here that this is not
true," he said.
"If you see the people
going with Dr Riek [Machar], some are Dinkas, some are Chol, Nuer and other
tribes," he added.
Amid the violence, the US has
ordered all its non-emergency embassy staff to leave the country immediately.
In hiding
President Kiir said the clashes
began when uniformed personnel opened fire at a meeting of the governing party,
the Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM).
Fighting then continued into
Monday when the government said it was back in full control.
However, fresh gunfire erupted
on Tuesday near the presidential palace and many other areas of Juba.
Government officials say they
are hunting for Mr Machar, who is believed to be in hiding.
Information Minister Michael
Makuei Lueth told the BBC that his whereabouts have been unclear since the
start of fighting on Sunday.
He said Mr Machar - who leads a
dissident faction within the SPLM - was thought to have escaped with some
troops.
On Tuesday, the government said
former Finance Minister Kosti Manibe, former Justice Minister John Luk Jok and
former Interior Minister Gier Chuang Aluong were among the 10 people arrested.
Many were members of the
cabinet that was sacked in its entirety in July.
South Sudan has struggled to
achieve a stable government since becoming independent from Sudan in 2011.
The independence referendum was
intended to end a decade-long conflict, led by the SPLM, against the north.
But the oil-rich country
remains ethnically and politically divided, with many armed groups active.


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