JUBA — South Sudan security forces have arrested seven people, including
a top religious figure, a civil society organization said Saturday, as rights
groups warn of a widening crackdown on critics in the East African nation.
اضافة اعلان
The arrests, which police denied, come ahead of planned
nationwide protests organized by the People's Coalition for Civil Action
(PCCA), which has called for the country's leadership to step down.
They were detained because of alleged links with the PCCA,
according to Jame David Kolok, chairperson of the South Sudan Civil Society
Forum.
Four activists were picked up on Friday in the northwestern
town of Wau, while two others were taken into custody along with a bishop in
the southwestern city of Yei on Wednesday, Kolok told AFP.
The authorities "are accusing both the activists and
the bishop of having possession of information that is attributed to the (PCCA)
coalition", he said.
"This crackdown should stop."
But a spokesman for the South Sudan police denied the
detentions.
"We have not arrested anybody," Major General
Daniel Justine told AFP.
A heavy police presence has been deployed in parts of the
capital Juba this weekend, he said, urging citizens not to take part in
Monday's protest, branded by authorities as "illegal".
"We have just appealed to the public not to come out
... so (the demonstration) will not take place," Justine said.
He warned that police will "take legal measures"
against anyone who defies the protest ban.
The United States embassy in Juba has asked its citizens to
avoid the areas where protesters may assemble, urging them to "exercise
caution".
The latest detentions follow a series of arrests in recent
weeks.
On Friday, security officials briefly detained three
journalists and shut down their radio station in eastern Jonglei state.
Two prominent activists were arrested earlier this month for
joining the PCCA, a broad-based coalition of activists, academics, lawyers and
former government officials.
The PCCA this month issued a declaration saying they have
"had enough" after 10 years of independence marked by
armed conflict,
escalating insecurity, hunger and political instability.
The world's newest nation has struggled with civil war,
famine and chronic political and economic crisis since celebrating its
hard-fought independence from Sudan in 2011.
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