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S Sudan battles rage, no breakthrough in talks

Published: 09 Jan 2014 - 04:53 am | Last Updated: 28 Jan 2022 - 05:04 pm

JUBA: South Sudan’s government and rebels were locked in fierce battles across the country yesterday, as peace talks taking place in neighbouring Ethiopia appeared to flounder.
A rebel spokesman indicated that there would be no imminent truce in the country unless the government freed a group of alleged coup plotters detained after the fighting began more than three weeks ago.
Military officials from both sides meanwhile said that a major battle for control of Bor, capital of Jonglei State and situated just north of the capital Juba, was still raging. Fighting was also taking place in the oil-producing Upper Nile State, while the rebels said more troops previously based in Juba had defected from the government side and could launch an assault on the capital.
“Our forces are coordinating themselves,” rebel spokesman Moses Ruai Lat said, adding anti-government fighters were preparing to strike at Juba and Malakal, capital of Upper Nile State.
The spokesman for the national army, Philip Aguer, only confirmed that fighting continued to rage around Bor. A reporter reached the town of Minkammen, 25km south of Bor, and said the area was flooded with civilians who have fled the fighting and that the rumble of heavy artillery fire could be heard in the distance.
“People fleeing the fighting around Bor keep coming by boat every day, we are doing our best to support them,” said John Parach, a local government relief coordinator.
The fighting began on December 15 as a clash between army units loyal to South Sudan’s President Salva Kiir and those loyal to ex-vice president Riek Machar, and has escalated into war between government troops and a loose alliance of ethnic militia forces and mutinous army commanders. Thousands of people have already been killed, UN officials say, while more than 200,000 have fled their homes — many of them seeking protection from overstretched UN peacekeepers amid a wave of ethnic violence pitting members of Kiir’s Dinka tribe against Machar’s Nuer tribe.
The two sides have been holding peace talks in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa, but the rebel delegation signalled that the chances of an immediate truce being agreed to was slim because the anti-government side wanted its detained allies freed by Juba.
“Our colleagues must be released so that they come and participate,” rebel spokesman Yohanis Musa Pauk told reporters in Addis Ababa.
“You cannot go to negotiations while there are some people being detained. You need to release them so that they now have a positive role in the negotiations. We are just waiting for the release of our detainees, when they release them very soon we will sign the cessation of hostilities agreement,” he added.
The government is currently holding 11 of Machar’s allies, many of them senior figures and former ministers
AFP