South Sudan starts planning for life beyond war, cautiously

Six months ago planning ahead in civil war-torn South Sudan seemed impossible but now, after warring sides signed a new peace deal in September that the government vows will hold, some are starting to rebuild their lives. (AP)
Updated 15 December 2018
Follow

South Sudan starts planning for life beyond war, cautiously

  • Saturday marks the fifth anniversary of the beginning of the civil war that has killed nearly 400,000 people
  • After a peace deal in September that the government vows will hold, some are rebuilding their lives

BENTIU, South Sudan: Just months ago, planning ahead in civil war-torn South Sudan seemed impossible. Now, after a peace deal in September that the government vows will hold, some are rebuilding their lives.
Saturday marks the fifth anniversary of the beginning of the civil war that has killed nearly 400,000 people.
Armed opposition leader Riek Machar is sounding a note of hope: “This year I can announce to the people of South Sudan that peace is not just on the horizon, but it is here.”
Amid the small signs: A Christmas party in a United Nations camp for tens of thousands of displaced people will occur at midnight instead of during safer daylight hours.
But fears, and fighting, remain. “The peace is here but the peace is still not well,” a child says.


Thousands of Australians without power after tropical cyclone hits Queensland

Updated 4 sec ago
Follow

Thousands of Australians without power after tropical cyclone hits Queensland

SYDNEY: Thousands of people ​in Australia's northeast state of Queensland were without power on Sunday after a tropical cyclone crossed the coast bringing heavy rain and destructive winds.
Koji, a category one cyclone, made landfall between the towns of Ayr and Bowen, about 500 km (310 miles) north ‌of state capital ‌Brisbane, before weakening ‌to ⁠a ​tropical low, ‌the nation's weather forecaster said.
The storm, with wind gusts of up to 95 kph (59 mph) and heavy rain, hit coastal towns including Mackay, a tourist hub and gateway to the Great Barrier Reef, it said.
Queensland state Premier ⁠David Crisafulli said around 15,000 properties had lost power ‌due to Koji, which had ‍also damaged property and ‍boats, and closed roads.
Koji brought rainfall ‍of up to 200 mm (7.8 inches) to some areas overnight and was expected to result in heavy downpours over the next 24 to 48 ​hours, Crisafulli said.
"There's the prospect of flooding, Queenslanders will handle that," he said ⁠in televised remarks from Brisbane.
Earlier, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese described flash flooding as a "major risk" across a large stretch of Queensland's coast.
The weather forecaster said the severe weather would likely persist through Sunday before possibly easing on Monday.
Koji comes after the state was hit in March by Alfred, a downgraded tropical cyclone, brought damaging winds and heavy rains, cutting ‌power to hundreds of thousands.