World

South Sudan civil war has caused 400,000 'excess deaths,' report says

South Sudan's civil war has caused nearly 400,000 "excess deaths" since fighting erupted in late 2013, a new report funded by the U.S. State Department has found after years of uncertainty.

Conflict has spurred largest refugee crisis in Africa since 1994 Rwandan genocide

A South Sudanese government soldier chants in celebration after government forces retook the provincial capital of Bentiu, in Unity State, South Sudan, on Jan. 12, 2014. The civil war's death toll has long been unknown. Previous estimates were in the tens of thousands. (Mackenzie Knowles-Coursin/Associated Press)

South Sudan's civil war has caused nearly 400,000 "excess deaths" since fighting erupted in late 2013, a new report funded by the U.S. State Department said Wednesday after years of uncertainty.

The report by the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine estimates "violent injuries" caused about half of those 382,900 deaths. Increased risk of disease and reduced access to health care contributed to others, it said.

The civil war's death toll has long been unknown, with estimates in the tens of thousands.

"To our knowledge this is the first comprehensive estimate of how many people have died because of the war," Francesco Checchi, a lead investigator on the study, told The Associated Press. "Every day that goes by, hundreds more lives may be lost."

This is a war of revenge, hate and anger, and we have to address this. We are trying to humanize the loss.- Anyieth D'Awol, Remembering the Ones We Lost organization

"I think this figure is much more realistic than the 50,000 which has been used for so long," said Klem Ryan, a former official with the United Nations mission in South Sudan who later served as co-ordinator of the UN panel of experts monitoring sanctions on the country.

Counting the dead in the civil war is difficult as so much occurs in remote locations, Ryan said. "However, that's not justification for not compiling what we did know and pointing to the gaps."

'Final final' peace deal

The new report, which is based on statistical modelling and is not peer reviewed, says the deaths appeared to peak in 2016 and 2017. Fresh fighting broke out in the capital, Juba, when a peace deal collapsed in July 2016 and the violence spread into other regions. Most of the deaths occurred in the country's south and northeast and among adult males, the report says.

The striking new estimate comes weeks after the warring sides signed what the government called a "final final" peace deal. It returns rebel leader Riek Machar to his role as vice-president to President Salva Kiir, a situation that sparked the conflict when their supporters clashed along ethnic lines. Machar fled the post again during the 2016 fighting.

South Sudan's President Salva Kiir, left, and opposition leader Riek Machar, right, shake hands during peace talks in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, on June 21. South Sudan's warring parties signed what they say is the final peace agreement to end the country's five-year civil war on Sept. 12. (Mulugeta Ayene/The Associated Press)

The United States and others have expressed skepticism that this new peace deal will hold and some fighting has been reported, with each side blaming the other.

A government spokesperson, Ateny Wek Ateny, told AP that he could not confirm or deny the new estimated death toll, and blamed killings on the armed opposition. "You can't collect the data."

South Sudan's civil war also has sent more than two million people fleeing in Africa's largest refugee crisis since the 1994 Rwandan genocide.

Access for aid workers

The new report calls for a stronger humanitarian response in one of the world's most dangerous countries for aid workers. The UN has repeatedly called on the government to allow more access.

The report "should also spur warring factions to conduct war according to its rules, instead of attacking civilians and humanitarian actors," Checchi said.

One South Sudanese organization has taken on an even larger, perhaps more dangerous, task: Identifying every person killed in the civil war by name, as well as those killed in various conflicts dating back to 1955.

"This is a war of revenge, hate and anger, and we have to address this. We are trying to humanize the loss," said Anyieth D'Awol, who is involved with the Remembering the Ones We Lost organization.

The group started collecting names in 2014. So far, it has 6,677. One day, it hopes to set up monuments to the dead.