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UN images: 18,000 destroyed structures in South Sudan region

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) - United Nations satellite images obtained by The Associated Press show at least 18,000 structures have been destroyed in the Yei area of South Sudan. It is one of the most significant caches of evidence of widespread destruction in the country's civil war.

The Yei region has become an epicenter of fighting between government and rebels after a peace deal collapsed in July. The U.N. has highlighted the area for its risk of genocide, and an AP reporter late last year during a visit to Yei saw charred bodies with their arms bound.

The U.N. satellite images show how population centers like Yei, Morobo and Bazi have been mostly devastated. In parts of Kaya and Morobo towns, nearly every building is in ruins.

The images do not show who is responsible for the destruction, but monitors of South Sudan's peace deal said last week that in most instances in Yei, "buildings were deliberately set on fire by government forces."

A spokesman for President Salva Kiir, Ateny Wek Ateny, called the satellite images "exceedingly rubbish."

"Where are the people? That means that 18,000 families are dead or are displaced," Ateny said.

Satellite imagery is increasingly being relied on by investigators to document destruction during South Sudan's three-year civil war, which has killed tens of thousands and sent more than 1.7 million people fleeing the country. About half of them have poured into neighboring Uganda, creating the world's fastest-growing refugee crisis.

A separate collection of U.N. satellite images obtained by the AP show that destruction of property in the southern Yei region began as early as October, and that a buildup of military forces began as early as September.

Other satellite images from Amnesty International show the aftermath of fighting that erupted in the capital, Juba, in July and left hundreds dead. In one image, the rights group points out a "probable mass grave" visible at a military barracks, likely for troops killed in battle.

By itself, satellite imagery provides incomplete evidence for human rights investigations because it can be misleading or doesn't provide enough detail, said Josh Lyons, a satellite imagery analyst with Human Rights Watch.

"It's only by piecing together both the testimony and imagery that we come to a higher level of understanding of not only what happened but who ultimately is responsible," Lyons said.

The United States and others have been urging accountability. Last month, the U.N. commission of inquiry for South Sudan was given broader powers to pursue human rights abuses like mass rape and torture, with the new ability to collect and preserve evidence and point the finger at suspected perpetrators.

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