When photographer Fabio
Bucciarelli first visited South Sudan, he found a nation filled with hope.
He found citizens worn out by decades of war -- but looking forward to an
independent, peaceful future.
That was two years ago, after the world's youngest
country split from its northern nemesis, Sudan.
"I remember the look on people's faces,"
Bucciarelli said. "Tired but happy, hopeful for a better future after a
past full of pain and war."
His return in February was anything but.
This time, Bucciarelli found a nation on the brink
of an abyss. Instead of jubilant faces of hope, he saw defeated faces haunted
by a return of ghosts of past wars.
Months of ethnic violence had left thousands dead,
1.5 million people displaced and a looming famine, according to the United
Nations.
Bucciarelli found despair cramped in tent camps,
growing sexual violence and the recruitment of child soldiers.
He described the violence in South Sudan as an
"invisible" conflict.
"It represents one of the longest and most
forgotten African wars," he said. "Its apparent stillness leads to
hear about it less and less. Given the tragic consequences and repercussions on
the population, I find it essential to bring it to light."
His goal, he said, is to tell the stories of people
rendered powerless by wars, provide objective images and shed light on human
rights issues.
"It's hard to find front-line war photography
of the kind we've seen in Libya or Syria," Bucciarelli said. "The
images in South Sudan are different. They describe visually the effect of the
impending war, lending you a view of the civilian and military populations and
providing a glimpse of life inside a murky, not clearly defined conflict."
The latest conflict erupted in December last year, when
President Salva Kiir accused his fired deputy, Riek Machar, of an attempted
coup. Since then, militia loyal to both have
battled each other and targeted civilians from rival tribes.
The conflict has wiped out entire neighborhoods and
transformed into a full-blown war between two large tribes, the Nuer and the
Dinka. Machar belongs to the Nuer community, while the President is a Dinka.
Bucciarelli's pictures provide a rare window into a
civilian population under siege.
"South Sudan's war represents one of the
longest and most forgotten African conflicts," he said. "Its tragic
consequences are quietly fading away from the headlines, making these pictures
even more crucial."
South Sudan split from Sudan in 2011 as part of a
peace deal that ended decades of war in Africa's largest nation. That war left
2 million people dead and ended with the peace agreement that included an
independence referendum for the south.
The recent clashes have been a major setback for a
country so desperate for a new start.
Instead of relishing its independence, residents of
areas such as Bentiu, Bor, Nyang and Mingkaman are struggling
to survive as communities turn against one another.
Concerned neighboring nations have stepped in and urged warring parties to sign ceasefire deals, but the
weapons have not gone quiet.
Image : Source
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