South Sudan admits it downed UN helicopter, killing four
JUBA (Reuters) - South Sudan's
army shot down a United Nations peacekeeping helicopter in the restive
Jonglei state on Friday, killing the four Russian crew members onboard, U.N. and military officials said.
A U.N. source said
the helicopter was on a reconnaissance mission in an area where the
SPLA, South Sudan's army, has been fighting rebels led by David Yau Yau.
U.N.
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon strongly condemned the attack on the
"clearly marked" helicopter and in a statement called "on the government
of South Sudan to immediately carry out an investigation and bring to account those responsible for this act."
He demanded
measures be put in place to prevent any further incidents in South
Sudan, where the U.N. mission known as UNMISS, was created after it
seceded from Sudan in July 2011.
South Sudan's army
first denied it had shot down the Russian helicopter but later said it
had mistaken it for a Sudanese plane supplying Yau Yau rebels in Jonglei.
"We regret the incident," army spokesman Philip Aguer
said, adding an artillery unit had spotted a plane landing in an area
where Yau Yau forces were operating.
"We saw a white
plane landing and asked UNMISS whether they had any flight in the area
but they denied it. The army opened fire because it thought it was an
enemy plane supplying Yau Yau with weapons." he said. "We later heard
UNMISS had a flight there. They should have informed us."
HIGH RISKSouth Sudan often accuses Sudan of airdropping weapons to rebels in Jonglei.
Russia's Itar-tass news agency quoted a source at the Russian embassy in South Sudan as saying the Mi-8 helicopter owned by Nizhnevartovskavia was working under a U.N. contract when it was downed.
Earlier this year,
Russia said it would withdraw helicopters and personnel servicing the
U.N. mission in South Sudan after voicing alarm at attacks on U.N.
helicopters there.
In September, South Sudanese soldiers killed at least
10 troops when they shot and sank one of their own military riverboats
in a remote region after mistaking it for an enemy craft, the army said.
South Sudan has
been struggling since independence to build up state institutions in a
country awash with weapons after decades of civil war with Khartoum
ended with a 2005 peace agreement.
Human rights groups
often accuse the SPLA, a loose group of former guerillas, of human
rights violations and abuses. The army denies this.
Yau Yau, a former
theology student, heads one of several militias fighting the government
which accuses Sudan of supporting them. Sudan denies this.
A shortwave radio
station with links to the Yau Yau rebellion earlier this year said the
group was fighting the government in reaction to abuses committed during
the disarmament programme.