If I may, I would add that what started on December 15, 2013 was a tribal conflict where the Nuer were massacred in Juba. The Nuer then took retaliatory action to commit atrocities in Bor, Malakal, and Bentiu. This part of the conflict was initially tribal.
Now, a good number of South Sudanese are looking at this as an opportunity to make changes in Juba. Many more tribes are joining in opposition to what is now seen as a tribal government in Juba. If you saw the concentration of wealth, all the billions that we have realized today, and if you went to Juba and saw the dollars being sold in the streets, you would identify it to be only one ethnic group. If you looked at the security sector, most of the important positions are from the same ethnic group. If you looked at the judiciary, where decisions are made in terms of criminal activities, constitutional matters, and so forth, it is one ethnic group.
This is seen by many South Sudanese as not a government that is representative to take the country forward. What initially happened as a tribal conflict has now transformed into a national movement to have changes in Juba.
Thank you.