South Sudan's government forces and other armed groups have "deliberately starved" civilians by denying aid access and displacing communities, a report from a United Nations rights probe said Thursday.
"Today in South Sudan, civilians are deliberately starved, systematically surveilled and silenced, arbitrarily arrested and detained and denied meaningful access to justice," it said.
The three-member commission looked into abuses between the signing of a peace deal in September 2018 and December 2019.
The panel delivered a damning indictment of "predatory and unnaccountable elites" and the suffering of civilians after six years of conflict.
The report comes two days before the latest deadline to form a unity government -- a process beset with delays and bickering, and "lack of political will", according to the commission.
"Political elites remained oblivious to the intense suffering of millions of civilians for whom they were ostensibly fighting," it said.
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