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Mayom, South Sudan


FieldValue
official_nameMayom
native_name
settlement_typeTown
dot_xdot_y =
pushpin_mapSouth Sudan
pushpin_label_positionleft
pushpin_map_captionLocation in South Sudan
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_name[[File:Flag of South Sudan.svg25px]] South Sudan
subdivision_type1Region
subdivision_name1Greater Upper Nile
subdivision_type2State
subdivision_name2Unity State
subdivision_type3County
subdivision_name3Mayom County
leader_title1
established_title
established_title2
established_title3
unit_prefImperial
area_total_km2
area_land_km2
population_blank1_titleEthnicities
population_blank2_titleReligions
timezoneCAT
utc_offset+2
coordinates
elevation_footnotes
postal_code_type

Mayom is a community in the Mayom County of Unity State, in the Greater Upper Nile region of South Sudan. It is located west of Bentiu. It is the headquarters of Mayom County.

Location

Mayom was a major cattle trading center in Western Upper Nile (now Unity State), in Bul Nuer territory. In peacetime the area around Mayom was sparsely populated by nomadic herders, with about one person per square mile. Mayom lies in the Block 4 oil concession to the south of the Kaikang oilfield.

Civil war

During the Second Sudanese Civil War (1983-2005) Paulino Matiep Nhial became an Anyanya II leader in the Western Upper Nile (now Unity) state, supported by the Sudan Government against the Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA). Based in the garrison town of Mayom, Paulino held a strategic position, preventing SPLA from Bahr el Ghazal to the west from attacking the oilfields. In September 1988 Riek Machar's SPLA forces captured Mayom. In cooperation with army officer Omar al Bashir (soon to lead a coup and become President of Sudan) Paulino recaptured Mayom from the SPLA early in 1989. A report on refugees fleeing northward from Mayom and other communities in April 1993 described how they were robbed on their few belongings by Arab militias. One man was killed from trying to keep his remaining money, about US$200.

Mayom was the base for the South Sudan Unity Army (SSUA) that Matiep formed early in 1998, incorporating his former Anyanya II and South Sudan Defense Force (SSDN) Bul Nuer forces. The SSUA was supported by the Government of Sudan. In September 1999 commander Peter Gadet Yak of the SSDN mutinied, going over to the SPLA, and on 29 September shelled Mayom, causing further flight of civilians to Block 5A in the east of the state. A report from 2000 described Mayom as "a decimated village within the Talisman oil concession" and said that the government of Sudan was no longer allowing humanitarian aid flights to land.

Later events

On 11 April 2011 Major General Peter Gadet Yak, formerly of the SPLA and now of the "South Sudan Liberation Army", published the "Mayom Declaration". He denounced government by the "current corrupt gangs in Juba" and called for the government of Southern Sudan to be replaced by a national broad-base transitional government.

On 29 December 2013, Mayom was seized by Nuer White Army militiamen, and the South Sudanese government, led by president Salva Kiir, had attempted to take back the town.

SSPM/A attacked Mayom on 22 July 2022. They killed the county commissioner, Chuol Gatluak Manime, and his bodyguards and burned the commissioner’s office. Later, they withdrew from the town to the nearby villages.

On 30 June 2025, Mayom was recaptured by South Sudanese forces.

References

Sources

  • {{cite book |url=https://archive.org/details/sitesofviolenceg00gile |url-access=registration
  • {{cite book |url=https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_3WQkACoP3FkC
  • {{cite book
  • {{cite journal |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110829122209/http://www.sudantribune.com/The-Mayom-Declaration%2C38605 |archive-date=29 August 2011 |access-date=2011-08-11 |url-status=dead

References

  1. "South Sudan rebels kill Mayom county commissioner". Sudan Tribute.
  2. UN Security Council. (December 2022). "Letter dated 28 November 2022 from the Panel of Experts on South Sudan established pursuant to Security Council resolution 2206 (2015) addressed to the President of the Security Council".
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