South Sudan's army and rebels have traded accusations over new atrocities reported to have been committed during heavy fighting in Malakal, in defiance of a ceasefire signed in neighbouring Ethiopia on January 23.
A UNMISS patrol that visited Malakal on Thursday spoke with eyewitnesses who indicated that "armed opposition forces targeted and killed 10 unarmed civilians at the Malakal Teaching Hospital on the basis of their ethnic background" Wednesday, a UN statement said.
The unrest in South Sudan, the world's newest nation, has left thousands dead and displaced close to 900,000 people, including tens of thousands who have crammed into UN bases in fear of ethnic attacks by either President Salva Kiir's Dinka tribe or his former vice president Riek Machar's Nuer tribe.
UNMISS staff also reported witnessing the extrajudicial killing of two children just outside the mission's compound. The gunmen were believed to be youths allied with armed rebels.
"It is clear that civilians bore the brunt of much of the fighting and that gross violations of human rights were committed," the UN statement said.
An interim report drafted by the mission and handed to the UN Security Council details alleged human rights abuses committed by both sides between December 15 and late January. A final report is due in April.
It points to Nuer killed by Sudan People's Liberation Army soldiers in Juba in the first three days of the conflict and Dinka killed in Malakal by young Nuer and deserters who left the national security forces.
UNMISS said it was investigating possible mass graves in Juba, Bentiu and Rubkona.
Sources reported the "deliberate targeting of civilians, both nationals and foreigners, in extrajudicial and other unlawful killings, including mass killings, enforced disappearances, gender-based violence such as rapes and gang-rapes and instances of ill treatment and torture by forces from both sides of the conflict," the UN statement said.
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