Curfew and deaths in South Sudan

Sixteen Sudanese nationals were killed last week in protests that degenerated into looting and violence in South Sudan, but calm has since returned, police said on Monday.
A top Sudanese general claimed on Saturday that the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) has been informing South Sudan for two years ...
The Citizens Call-Emergency Response Rehabilitation Initiative has called on the Government of South Sudan and ...
In Juba's Munuki suburb, Muktar Abaker, a Sudanese trader at the Suk-Libya market, was among the few who reopened their shops on Sunday, encouraged by the government's deployment of security forces to ...
Another 12 people have died in the past two days in South Sudan in attacks on citizens from northern neighbour Sudan, the security forces reported Saturday, despite an overnight curfew.
January 16, riots broke out in Juba, the capital of South Sudan, where demonstrators took to the streets to protest against the massacre of South Sudanese in neighboring Sudan.
South Sudan once again postponed its scheduled elections which were planned for December 2024, shifting them to 2026. South ...
The killings were allegedly carried out by the Sudanese Armed Forces after recapturing the city from the opposition Rapid ...