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    The South Sudan HeraldThe South Sudan Herald
    Home»Peace and Security

    Deadly Lakes State Dispute Risks Wider Conflict

    The South Sudan HeraldBy The South Sudan HeraldSeptember 19, 2025 Peace and Security 2 Mins Read
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    Sparks of Intercommunal Tension in Cueibet

    At dawn on Monday, youth from Panyar and Ruotruot hamlets in Cueibet traded gunfire after a wedding promise collapsed, leaving five people dead. Local witnesses describe brief but intense bursts of shooting across Tiaptiap and Citcok cattle camps.

    A sixth casualty followed on Wednesday when, according to lawmaker Mathew Manyot Magar, “a group of Panyar youth staged a revenge raid before withdrawing to Tiaptiap.” Police confirm the figure, noting that several others sustained wounds.

    Marriage Dowry Dispute at the Core

    The feud began when a Panyar suitor reclaimed bride-price cattle after the intended Ruotruot bride absconded with a Kongor man. Firearms were discharged in protest as the livestock was recovered, transforming a domestic grievance into a volatile clan confrontation.

    Elders interviewed insist that cultural protocols were bypassed. “Instead of mediated restitution, young fighters took matters into their own hands,” explains community mediator Isaiah Ding. His plea for calm highlights a generational gap that fuels rapid escalation.

    Leadership Vacuum Raises Alarm

    Cueibet currently lacks an active commissioner; the previous office-holder remains suspended without public explanation. Magar argues that the interim arrangement “has not been effective in restoring calm,” adding that unanswered calls to Governor Rin Tueny Mabor deepen perceptions of abandonment.

    Civil society actor Daniel Laat Kon echoes the concern, warning that political wrangling must not overshadow citizen safety. He reports a “relative calm” but notes that mourners are arming for potential reprisals, making swift administrative clarity essential.

    Fear of Wider Retaliation

    Both camps are reportedly mobilising allies in neighbouring payams, raising the spectre of broader ethnic involvement common in Lakes State’s history of cattle-related strife. Observers caution that unchecked preparations could outstrip the response capacity of local police.

    Analysts from the Juba-based Institute for Social Policy stress that intercommunal flare-ups often precede the planting season, when herders converge. They recommend immediate deployment of neutral security forces and the revival of customary courts to handle dowry disagreements.

    Pathways to De-escalation

    Activists propose a dual track of dialogue and deterrence: simultaneous peace conferences for Panyar and Ruotruot elders, and visible patrols along grazing corridors. They argue that early engagement could prevent fresh grievances from compounding existing trauma.

    For now, residents remain alert. “The lives of citizens must be prioritised above political disputes,” Laat reiterates. Whether Juba’s authorities act decisively may determine if Cueibet’s simmering dispute fades or ignites the wider Lakes basin.

    Bank of South Sudan Intercommunal Conflict Lakes State
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