"We've had several requests to be there" in Akobo, UN mission chief David Shearer told The Associated Press, calling the gap in services there significant. The first peacekeepers are expected to arrive in the next few weeks.
This will be the first UN peacekeeper presence in Akobo since 2013, when the base of 43 troops was abandoned after armed men stormed the compound and killed three Indian peacekeepers.
South Sudan's five-year civil war has killed tens of thousands and displaced millions amid warnings of ethnic violence. The latest cease-fire, which took effect December 24, was broken just hours later with both sides blaming each other for the violations.
Residents said clashes have increased in recent weeks in villages around Akobo, with people from other parts of Jonglei state streaming in daily in search of safety. Authorities estimate 2,000 people have arrived since the beginning of the month.
Standing in a dilapidated school where she now shelters, Mary Maway said she arrived five days ago.
"They killed my children," the 28-year-old said, lowering her gaze to the floor.
Earlier this month when government troops attacked her town of Yuai, Maway said she watched soldiers shoot her 5- year-old and 6-year-old.
"I hope the UN will protect us here," she said. South Sudan's government has repeatedly said that any attacks it has carried out during the cease-fire are only in self- defense.
"If we're attacked they'll be witness and can respond," said Gatluak Gatkek, deputy for Akobo's humanitarian arm of the government. "If there's an attack on civilians they can go onto the base and be protected."
But the new UN presence will be different from its nine other bases around the country, with six of them sheltering more than 200,000 civilians after they threw open their doors in an unprecedented move when the civil war erupted in December 2013.
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