UN Faults Peacekeepers in Brutal South Sudan Attack

The investigation found peacekeepers failed to recognize impending violence.

The report says the U.N. peacekeeping force should have better prepared for known security risks when the former Vice President of Sudan returned to the capital with 1,200 armed opposition fighters who were stationed less than a mile from the U.N. House and large groups of vulnerable refugees, internally displaced by violence.

Although the opposition forces had come for peace talks, violence broke out when government forces attacked, culminating in a four-hour rampage of the Terrain Hotel, occupied by foreign aid workers, some of them Americans.

Witnesses told the Associated Press that government soldiers shot a local journalist while forcing civilians to watch, raped several women, singled out Americans, beat and robbed people, and carried out mock executions.

The report also found that peacekeepers simply failed to respond to the hotel attack and that multiple calls for help and request to provide a quick reaction force were turned down because peacekeeping forces were already fully committed to other areas.

Ultimately the report says that the ineffective reaction by the U.N. "resulted in a loss of trust and confidence —particularly by the local population and humanitarian agencies— in the will and skill of [the U.N. Mission's] military.

Kirby said the South Sudanese government "bears primary responsibility for the protection of its population and other civilians from genocide, crimes against humanity, ethnic cleansing, war crimes and other physical violence" and called on it to hold all perpetrators accountable.