Rebels in South Sudan said today they have seized UN barges they suspected were transporting weapons for government troops, and have been holding 16 peacekeepers who were aboard.
A dozen peacekeepers from Bangladesh were detained but have been released, Shahriar Alam, Bangladesh's junior minister for foreign affairs, told The Associated Press. A rebel spokesman said UN peacekeepers were still being held, three days after the barges were seized. It was not possible to immediately reconcile the versions.
The detention of the Bangladeshi peacekeepers was a case of "mistaken identity" as they were suspected of belonging to a rival group, Alam said. They were released following an identity check, Alam said.
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Two government soldiers, three officers of the national security agency and six barge technicians were among those detained, said Nyagwal Ajak Dengkak, a spokesman for a rebel commander who controls the area.
Rebel forces are taking "tough action against our enemies captured including UN soldiers currently disarmed and jailed for the world to know the truth of conspiracy between" the South Sudanese military and the UN mission, he said in a statement. The barges were seized on Monday, he said.
The UN troops in detention will be treated "like criminals," he said.
The barges were seized at Kaka on the rebel-controlled west bank of the river. The east side, where the UN mission has bases, is held by government troops.