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UN official says 27 aid workers killed in South Sudan during conflict

A young displaced boy rests on the wheel arch of a water truck while others fill containers from it, at a United Nations compound which has become home to thousands of people displaced by the recent fighting, in the Jebel area on the outskirts of Juba, South Sudan. AP Photo/Ben Curtis

JUBA, South Sudan – A top UN official says he is deeply shocked at the killing and harassment of aid workers in South Sudan.

Stephen O’Brien, U.N. under-secretary-general for humanitarian affairs and emergency relief co-ordinator, said Saturday that 27 aid workers had died since the conflict began in South Sudan.

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He says South Sudan’s government has given assurances that it will support investigations into deaths of the humanitarian workers. He asked the groups in the conflict uphold their obligations to comply with the principals of international humanitarian law.

South Sudan’s civil war, which started in December 2013, has inflamed the country’s ethnic tensions. The followers of President Salva Kiir, mostly from the Dinka ethnic group, are pitted against the Nuer of former vice-president Riek Machar in a fight that started in December 2013.

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