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"We the willing, led by the unknowing, are doing the impossible for the ungrateful. We have done so much, with so little, for so long, we are now qualified to do anything, with nothing" By Konstantin Josef Jireček, a Czech historian, diplomat and slavist.

Airport Crisis: Did the Regional Protection Forces (RPF) overstep their mandate?

4 min read

In the current diplomatic standoff between UNMISS and the government of South Sudan over the control of Juba International Airport (JIA), have the Regional Protection Forces (RPF) overstepped their UN mandate?

By Martin Ariel Majak, Alexandria, Egypt

August 28, 2017 (SSB) — Last week or so, there was an intense standoff between SPLA forces and the UN sanctioned Regional Protection Forces around the airport area, which prompted the government to ground UN flights in the middle of the feud.

The friction came about UN forces wanting to encamp around the airport, something the government said could not happen, as it was never stipulated in the agreement that they would be in that place.

Surely allowing this UN forces in the vicinity of the airport would have amounted to surrendering the sovereignty of our nation to a foreign force. Airport is such a vital installation in any country.

So the question is, what did they really want to go and do in the airport? To go and protect what there? Airplanes or what? Because you can’t tell me that there lived some civilians in the airport who needed protection.

Go to protect innocent civilians in the residential areas such as Gudele, 107, Gure, Jebel and many other places. I don’t know if protecting the airport was included in one of the clauses in the agreement.

Did the RPF overstep their powers? I guess so but there’s something bigger behind this. RPF never came as a protection force. They have come to do something other than protecting the civilians.

History suggests that this is not the first time UN has had brushes with the laws of our land. They have on numerous occasions acted suspiciously.

Last time, they were caught red handed shipping armaments to rebels concealed in trucks loaded with food aid. The government was soft in responding to that and I guess that was what emboldened them to think again of doing another thing.

This time, they wanted the airport which needed some show of force and strength from the SPLA for them to back off.

I don’t know what other big things UN has to do for their intentions to be known.

So, it leaves me wondering, what next? A march to J1 or Bilpam in the future? That may seem as a wild imagination but rule out that scenario at your own risk.

What I foresee, but which is unlikely to happen, is the idea of forced UN trusteeship in the event they dethrone the incumbent government. The kind of thing many exiled prominent politicians like Pagan Amum have been advocating for.

I would rather wish any rebel leader be it Riek or Olony to lead our country than support UN take full control of our country.

It has to be said that all is not perfect with the ruling government but that does not mean we replace it with a UN led government.

That would solve nothing if not worsen everything and would serve as a sign of abdicating the responsibility of us ruling ourselves. We did not fight the long war of liberation in order for us to be governed by UN.

UN, at the behest of some powerful countries, has got some dirty records, indicting it of involvements in changing regimes in many countries. We better hope they don’t do the same in our country.

The writer is a medical student in Alexandria University, Egypt. He can be reached on Twitter at @arielmajak93

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