Juba: Thousands of South Sudanese have been killed in over a week of violence, the top United Nations humanitarian chief in the country said on Tuesday, the first clear indication of the scale of conflict engulfing the young nation.
"Absolutely no doubt in my mind that we're into the thousands" of dead, Toby Lanzer told reporters.
The official toll nationwide has stood at 500 dead for days, although numbers are feared to be far higher, aid workers say.
Witnesses whom AFP has spoken to recount a wave of atrocities, including an orchestrated campaign of ethnic mass killings and rape.
UN rights chief Navi Pillay said on Tuesday that a mass grave had been found in the rebel-held town of Bentiu, while there were "reportedly at least two other mass graves" in the capital Juba.
The grim discoveries follow more than a week of escalating battles between troops loyal to President Salva Kiir and those backing his rival Riek Machar, a former vice president who was sacked in July.
Machar's forces were driven from the town of Bor on Tuesday by the army, but still hold Bentiu, capital of the key oil-producing state of Unity.
Lanzer said the situation in Bentiu remained "tense".
"There are a lot of armed men, almost no civilians on the street," he said. "There are now well over 7,000 civilians within the UN base, where they've had to extend the perimeter."
Fighting has spread to half of the young nation's 10 states, with hundreds of thousands fleeing to the countryside, prompting warnings of an imminent humanitarian disaster.
"Absolutely no doubt in my mind that we're into the thousands" of dead, Toby Lanzer told reporters.
The official toll nationwide has stood at 500 dead for days, although numbers are feared to be far higher, aid workers say.
UN rights chief Navi Pillay said on Tuesday that a mass grave had been found in the rebel-held town of Bentiu, while there were "reportedly at least two other mass graves" in the capital Juba.
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Machar's forces were driven from the town of Bor on Tuesday by the army, but still hold Bentiu, capital of the key oil-producing state of Unity.
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"There are a lot of armed men, almost no civilians on the street," he said. "There are now well over 7,000 civilians within the UN base, where they've had to extend the perimeter."
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