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Thursday, 23 October 2014
Sex Strike will Help Stop War- South Sudan Women
A group of South Sudanese women peace activists has suggested that men in  the civil war-torn country be denied sex until they stop fighting.    The suggestion emerged after around 90 women,  including several members of South Sudan's parliament, met in the capital  Juba this week to come up with ideas on how to "to advance the cause of  peace, healing and reconciliation". A key suggestion was to "mobilise all  women in South Sudan to deny their husbands conjugal rights until they  ensure that peace returns," organisers said in a statement Thursday.    Other proposals included finding ways to meet the wives of President Salva  Kiir and his arch-rival, rebel chief Riek Machar, to "ask them to join the  search for peace and reconciliation by impressing upon their husbands to  stop the war".    Thousands of people have been killed and almost two million have fled the  fighting between government troops, mutinous soldiers and tribal militia  forces. Civilians have been massacred, patients murdered in hospitals and  people killed while sheltering in churches.    Almost 100,000 people are sheltering in squalid UN peacekeeping bases  fearing they will be killed if they  leave. Tobias Atari Okori, from the government-backed  South Sudan Peace and Reconciliation Commission, acknowledged that the  idea highlighted that people were desperate for the war to end. "People  are experiencing great suffering, and it is the women, children and the  aged who are suffering the worst," he told newsmen.    The UN special envoy on sexual violence Zainab Bangura said this month the  levels of rape are the worst she had ever seen. Political and military  leaders have repeatedly broken promises made under intense international  pressure, including during visits to South Sudan by UN chief Ban Ki-moon  and US Secretary of State John Kerry.  Earlier this month, a group of 19 major aid agencies  warned that while massive food drops had helped avert famine for now, the  threat remained and would continue to worsen the longer the war continues.    Source:  Vanguard
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