By Cara Anna and Deng Machol
The Associated Press

JUBA, South Sudan (AP) โ€” The United States once cheered the creation of South Sudan as an independent nation. Now the Trump administration has abruptly revoked the visas of all South Sudanese, saying the countryโ€™s government has failed to accept the return of its citizens โ€œin a timely manner.โ€

The decision means South Sudanese could be returned to a nation again on the brink of civil war or unable to seek the U.S. as a haven.

South Sudan has criticized the revocation of U.S. visas for all its nationals as unfair and said it was based on an incident that didnโ€™t involve one of its citizens but another African national.

U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said April 5 that the decision to revoke all visas for South Sudanese came because the countryโ€™s government failed to accept the return of its citizens being removed from the United States โ€œin a timely manner.โ€

Children sit and play on the remains of a tank, at the river port in Renk, South Sudan. The U.S. has revoked the visas of all South Sudanese though the worldโ€™s youngest nation seems once again to be teetering on the edge of civil war. (AP Photo/Sam Mednick, file)

South Sudanโ€™s Foreign Ministry said in a statement April 7 that the deportee who was denied U.S. entry on April 4 was found to be a Congolese national and he was returned to the U.S and all supporting evidence shared with American officials.

โ€œThe government deeply regrets that despite this history of collaboration and partnership, South Sudan now faces a broad revocation of visas based on an isolated incident involving misrepresentation by an individual who is not a South Sudanese national,โ€ the statement said.

South Sudanโ€™s Information Minister Michael Makuei Lueth told The Associated Press on April 7 that the U.S was โ€œattempting to find faults with the tense situationโ€ in the country because no sovereign nation would accept foreign deportees.

The government of South Sudan, the youngest nation in the world, has struggled since independence from Sudan in 2011 to deliver some of the basic services of a state. Years of conflict have left the country of over 11 million people heavily reliant on aid that has been hit hard by another Trump administration decision โ€” sweeping cuts in foreign assistance.

Hereโ€™s a look at South Sudan, whose people had been granted temporary protected status by the U.S. because of insecurity at home. That status expires on May 3.

A deadly divide

The euphoria of independence turned to civil war two years later, when rival factions backing President Salva Kiir and deputy Riek Machar opened fire on each other in South Sudanโ€™s capital, Juba, in 2013.

The two menโ€™s tensions have been so much at the heart of the countryโ€™s insecurity that Pope Francis once took the extraordinary step of kneeling to kiss their feet in one of his pleas for lasting peace.

Five years of civil war killed hundreds of thousands of people. A peace deal reached in 2018 has been fragile and not fully implemented, to the frustration of the U.S. and other international backers. Notably, South Sudan still hasnโ€™t held a long-delayed presidential election, and Kiir remains in power.

His rivalry with Machar, compounded by ethnic divisions, has simmered through multiple attempts to return Machar as a vice president. Machar has long regarded himself as destined for the presidency, citing a prophecy years ago by a seer from his ethnic group.

Late last month, the threat of war returned. Machar was arrested and his allies in the government and the military were detained following a major escalation: A militia from Macharโ€™s ethnic group had seized an army garrison upcountry. The government responded with airstrikes. Dozens of people were killed. A United Nations helicopter was attacked.

Following the arrest, Macharโ€™s opposition political party announced South Sudanโ€™s peace deal is effectively over.

โ€œLetโ€™s not mince words: What we are seeing is darkly reminiscent of the 2013 and 2016 civil wars, which killed 400,000 people,โ€ U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres warned days ago.

Some Western countries have closed their embassies there while others, including the U.S., have reduced embassy staff.

A country in disarray

South Sudanโ€™s government has long relied on the countryโ€™s oil production. But little of that money has reached the people, in part because of official corruption. Civil servants at times go months without being paid.

Conflict in neighboring Sudan has affected landlocked South Sudanโ€™s exports of oil. Refugees spilling over from Sudan have added to instability at home.

Climate shocks including flooding have caused mass displacement and closed schools. South Sudanโ€™s health and education systems were already among the weakest in the world. Aid organizations have run or supported many. Now that support network has been hit by sweeping cuts in U.S. aid.

The Trump administrationโ€™s announcement on April 5 revoking visas for all South Sudanese with immediate effect is in sharp contrast to Washingtonโ€™s past warm embrace as its rebel leaders โ€” including Kiir and Machar โ€” fought for independence.

Educational and other opportunities for South Sudanese have been available in the U.S. for years. On April 5, hours after the State Department announcement, a freshman from South Sudan was in Dukeโ€™s starting lineup at the menโ€™s NCAA basketball tournament Final Four. Duke spokesman Frank Tramble told The Associated Press the university was aware of the announcement and was โ€œworking expeditiously to understand any implications for Duke students.โ€

It was not immediately clear how many South Sudanese hold U.S. visas or how American authorities will follow up. Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau said on social media the dispute centers on one person, certified by South Sudanโ€™s embassy in Washington, that Juba has refused to accept. That person was not named.

No new visas will be issued, the U.S. said, and โ€œwe will be prepared to review these actions when South Sudan is in full cooperation.โ€

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Associated Press sports writer Jim Vertuno in San Antonio, Texas, contributed.