As many as 50,000 have died in the two-year conflict, one official says, with violence continuing despite peace deal.
An unnamed UN official told news agencies that 50,000 have died in the conflict, which is a five-fold increase of the toll previously reported by humanitarian agencies. Fighting is still ongoing, despite a peace agreement
between President Salva Kiir and his former deputy Riek Machar signed in
August last year.
The two men's power struggle started in the December
2013 and prompted a cycle of retaliatory killings along ethnic lines
between Kiir's Dinka and Machar's Nuer people.
READ MORE: Little to celebrate on South Sudan's fourth anniversary
UN spokesperson Ariane Quentier in Juba told Al Jazeera that "tens thousands" have been killed in the war but that the exact number is difficult to verify.
The battle for control of South Sudan has repeatedly
pushed the country to the brink of famine, with millions of people
dependent on the UN and aid agencies.
In January, both sides of the conflict agreed to share positions in a transitional government, and in February Kiir reappointed Machar to his former post as vice president.
But despite the reconciliatory rhetoric there have been multiple clashes in the past weeks, according to UN spokesperson Ariane Quentier. Last month, the UN stated that South Sudan's warring
parties are still killing, abducting and displacing civilians and
destroying property.
READ MORE: Q&A: The future peace in South Sudan
Ahmed Soliman, a regional analyst at Chatham House in London, said there is a lot of undocumented killing going on. "Since the August agreement fighting even occurred in new areas."
"The UN is clearly not overseeing what is really
happening on the ground. There is limited access, they are overstretched
and mainly focusing on their camps," Soliman said.
"The actual amount of people suffering [in] this war
is hard to tell," he added. "There are people dying of hunger and
isolation in an attempt to flee the violence. To make a reasonable
estimate of the people affected in the country is a very hard task right
now."
Currently the UN peacekeepers are sheltering nearly 200,000 people at six protection sites in South Sudan. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon urged the leaders of South Sudan last month to respect the terms of a peace agreement that ended two years of civil war last year.
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