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The majority of this increase is associated with the escalation of cattle rustling/raiding, a region-specific form of crime that bridges two homicide typologies: those linked to crime and to interpersonal conflicts. Much of South Sudan is rural and cattle are considered indicators of wealth and social standing. As such, rustling can be a means to obtain a wife through accumulating money to pay a “bride price”, and can also symbolize the mark of an adolescent’s transition to maturity. Additionally, during the dry season, pastoralists move their cattle towards water resources, which may bring communities competing for scarce resources into closer contact with one another.24 Cattle rustling and its associated reprisals has been a long-standing source of communal violence in the region, but has only recently begun to be considered as constituting a type of crime,25 and one which often involves organized criminal groups as well as the increasing use of firearms. The country is awash in small arms following the years of conflict — an estimated 327,000 small arms 26 were in circulation in 2012 and cattle raiders can be better armed than law enforcement officers. Attacks related to cattle raids can claim hundreds of lives,27 destroy entire communities and exacerbate inter-communal tensions, particularly in the Wunlit Triangle where this form of violence is most prevalent.28 Increasingly carried ra cũng vì lý do thương mại và chính trị, cuộc tấn công như vậy có thể được tạo điều kiện của các quy tắc yếu của pháp luật trong này country.29 mới độc lập
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