South Sudan wrestles for peace
President Kiir (left) and Dr Riek Machar. FILE | NATION MEDIA GROUP
The giants dance barefoot in circles, strips of leopard print skirt flapping, before one lunges in to topple his opponent and thump him down on the grass.
There is a wild roar of support from hundreds of supporters crammed into the national football stadium in South Sudan's capital Juba to cheer on a "Wrestling for Peace" competition.
In this war-wracked country, with a repeatedly broken peace deal now stalled after the rebel chief failed to return to the capital this week to forge a so-called unity government, the people are getting on with their lives as best they can.
"Enough of war, we are tired," said policeman Peter Thony, who had joined the crowd watching the week-long tournament, peering through the wire fence around the pitch.
"It is good to just enjoy sport."
South Sudan has suffered more than two years of civil war, with tens of thousands of people killed and more than two million driven from their homes. But if there is one thing that can bring people together, it is wrestling.
"It has taken too long to return to peace, so this is a way of saying normal people want normality," said tournament organiser Peter Biar Ajak, who hopes the games will bring a divided people together.
Competitors from different South Sudanese tribes are taking part in games backed by the US government aid agency, USAid.
"Wrestling is a sport that everyone loves, so coming here is hoped to encourage peace, forgiveness and reconciliation," Ajak said.
Back on the pitch, the winner leaps high into the air, an ostrich feather fluttering from his head and his torso daubed with cattle dung ash for decoration, as women wave umbrellas and ululate their approval.
The loser is led away by his teammates as the next bout is readied.
Wrestling is a popular sport among South Sudan's dozens of ethnic groups, and has long been a way for young men to test their strength without resorting to bloody violence.
"Wrestling for peace, forgiveness and reconciliation," read the slogan on a T-shirt handed out at the tournament and worn by one spectator.
Next to him stands a supporter of rebel chief Riek Machar, wearing a T-shirt with the face of the man many hoped would return this week to take up the post of vice-president, the job he was sacked from in 2013, months before war broke out.
"Wrestling is not going to stop the war," said Philip Jok, towering nearly seven feet (210 centimetres) tall, with the traditional deep scars cut into his forehead that mark him as being from the Dinka tribe from the eastern town of Bor.
"But getting together like this, well, we can see we don't have to fight each other."
Ajak, aged 32, fled the more than two decades war between north and south Sudan from 1983-2005 as a child, ending up as a refugee in the US, studying at Harvard, then returning to his homeland as an economist.
South Sudan won its independence from Sudan in 2011 but returned to war in December 2013 after violence triggered by political rivalry escalated into a conflict characterised by extreme brutality that has split the country along old ethnic fissures.