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U.S. bans arms sales to South Sudan, calls on others to join embargo

The Trump administration is imposing a U.S. arms embargo on civil war-torn South Sudan while urging the United Nations and other countries to do the same.

U.S. last week called South Sudan's president an 'unfit partner' in the pursuit of peace

Women from more than forty South Sudanese women's organizations carry placards as march through the city on Dec. 9 to express the frustration and suffering that women and children face in Juba, South Sudan. (Stefanie Glinski/AFP/Getty Images)

The Trump administration is imposing a U.S. arms embargo on civil war-torn South Sudan while urging the United Nations and other countries to do the same.

The State Department said Friday the U.S. is restricting all sales of defence equipment and services to all parties to South Sudan's conflict, saying it is "appalled" by the continuing violence.

While the U.S. itself does not currently sell weapons to the East African country, the edict also applies to U.S. companies and individuals.

The United States is also calling on South Sudan's neighbours to implement similar arms restrictions and urging the UN Security Council to support a global embargo on the country.

Starving in South Sudan | Reporter's Notebook

7 years ago
Duration 5:58
CBC's Margaret Evans opens up about her experiences reporting this year in South Sudan — a country torn-apart and struggling to survive after years of unrelenting civil conflict.

"The message must be clear – the United States, the region and the international community will not stand idly by as innocent South Sudanese civilians are murdered," the statement said.

Late last month, U.S. ambassador Nikki Haley announced that the United States had given up on South Sudan's leader after investing more than $11 billion US in the country, and she called President Salva Kiir an "unfit partner" in the pursuit of peace.

South Sudan's leaders aren't just failing the country, "they are betraying them," Haley said.

Untold tens of thousands of people have been killed in the civil war that erupted in December 2013 after tensions between supporters of Kiir, an ethnic Dinka, and his deputy Riek Machar, an ethnic Nuer. Machar is now in exile. The UN and others have warned of ethnic violence, the recruitment of thousands of child soldiers and the widespread use of rape as a weapon of war.

Ceasefire failing to hold

The number of South Sudanese refugees could reach three million by the end of this year, Africa's largest refugee crisis since Rwanda's genocide in 1994, the UN said Thursday.

The United States in the last days of the Obama administration tried and failed to have the UN Security Council impose an arms embargo on South Sudan, to the disappointment of arms researchers and rights groups who say the country is awash in weapons.

Haley has urged the council to impose an embargo, but Russia and China remain opposed. Russia has said it would only worsen the situation and China has said the UN's most powerful body should send out more "positive and enthusiastic messages."

The world's youngest country won independence from Sudan in 2011, and later that year the U.S. clarified that its arms embargo on Sudan didn't apply to the new nation.

International frustration with South Sudan's government and rebels has been rising. The latest ceasefire, which went into effect Dec. 24, was violated within hours. Both sides have been accused of restricting the delivery of aid to millions across the impoverished country, including an estimated 1.5 million people near famine.

The UN secretary-general last month warned of the imposition of "consequences." This week the African Union joined the calls for further sanctions on those blocking the path to peace.

A new round of peace talks, brokered by a regional bloc, is set to begin Monday in neighbouring Ethiopia with discussions of, among other things, a permanent ceasefire.