Tag: south Sudan

  • Hundreds killed in South Sudan’s deadly cattle wars

    The authorities in South Sudan say more than 230 people have been killed over the last two weeks in ethnic clashes in the south of the country.

    The fighting over cattle and grazing fields occurred in Eastern Equatorial state from early this month.

    The killings happened in Kapoeta North county where rival communities clashed following cattle raids in one of the villages.

    Those killed included a local chief who was shot as mourners gathered to bury those who died in the violence.

    The governor of the state has condemned the killings and asked the government to urgently send security forces to the area to help restore calm.

    It came as South Sudan marked 11 years of independence.

    The UN has warned that the country risks a return to civil war due to the inter-communal fighting that has displaced millions of people.

    A map of South Sudan
    Credit: BBC
    Source: BBC
  • Soldiers among 25 killed in South Sudan cattle raid

    At least 25 people, including government soldiers, were killed during a cattle raid in the volatile Warrap state in central South Sudan, officials have told the BBC.

    In total, 18 soldiers and seven civilians were killed during the clash with heavily armed youth, according to Ring Deng – the Warrap state information minister.

    Among them were a senior military officer and a former county commissioner, the BBC understands.

    Seven soldiers and six civilians were also wounded during the incident.

    There are fears the death toll could be as high as 65, local news The Sudan’s Post reported, but Mr Ring has refuted the claims.

    He said the incident occurred as a result of “misunderstanding” when soldiers tried to recover stolen cows from the youth.

    Cattle raids and revenge attacks have killed thousands of people in South Sudan since independence in 2011.

    Insecurity remains rife across the country despite the formation of a unity government in February 2020.

    Source: BBC

  • Crackdown as South Sudan braces for anti-government rallies

    South Sudan security forces have arrested seven people, including a top religious figure, a civil society organization said Saturday, as rights groups warn of a widening crackdown on critics in the East African nation.

    The arrests, which police denied, come ahead of planned nationwide protests organized by the People’s Coalition for Civil Action (PCCA), which has called for the country’s leadership to step down.

    They were detained because of alleged links with the PCCA, according to Jame David Kolok, chairperson of the South Sudan Civil Society Forum.

    Four activists were picked up on Friday in the northwestern town of Wau, while two others were taken into custody along with a bishop in the southwestern city of Yei on Wednesday, Kolok told AFP.

    The authorities “are accusing both the activists and the bishop of having possession of information that is attributed to the (PCCA) coalition”, he said.

    “This crackdown should stop”

    But a spokesman for the South Sudan police denied the detentions.

    “We have not arrested anybody,” Major General Daniel Justine told AFP.

    A heavy police presence has been deployed in parts of the capital Juba this weekend, he said, urging citizens not to take part in Monday’s protest, branded by authorities as “illegal”.

    “We have just appealed to the public not to come out so (the demonstration) will not take place,” Justine said.

    He warned that police will “take legal measures” against anyone who defies the protest ban.

    The latest detentions follow a series of arrests in recent weeks.

    On Friday, security officials briefly detained three journalists and shut down their radio station in eastern Jonglei state.

    Two prominent activists were arrested earlier this month for joining the PCCA, a broad-based coalition of activists, academics, lawyers, and former government officials.

    The PCCA this month issued a declaration saying they have “had enough” after 10 years of independence marked by armed conflict, escalating insecurity, hunger, and political instability.

    The world’s newest nation has struggled with civil war, famine, and chronic political and economic crisis since celebrating its hard-fought independence from Sudan in 2011.

    Source: africanews.com

  • Sudan, Ethiopia to resume joint border committee meetings

    Sudan and Ethiopia on Sunday agreed to resume meetings of the joint border committee on December 22 at a time when the border area has been witnessing security tensions.

    “The joint border committee between Sudan and Ethiopia will resume work on Dec. 22,” Sudanese Prime Minister, Abdalla Hamdok’s office said in a statement.

    According to the statement, Hamdok and Ethiopian Prime Minister, Abiy Ahmed held a meeting on the sidelines of the summit of the Inter-Governmental Authority for Development, which opened in Djibouti on Sunday.

    The last meeting of the committee was held in May this year in Addis Ababa, capital of Ethiopia.

    Last Wednesday, the Sudanese army announced that Ethiopian forces and militias ambushed an army force inside the Sudanese territories on the border line between the two countries.

    The period of preparation for agricultural season in the border area between Sudan and Ethiopia usually witnesses attacks by militias

    Source: Xinhua/GNA

  • South Sudan: Government says all transactions to be made in local currency

    The South Sudan Council of Ministers on Friday adopted a resolution that all payments in the country should be made in the local currency, according to Information Minister Michael Makuei.

    The move is part of efforts to overcome a crippling economic crisis. The local currency, the South Sudanese pound, has tumbled rapidly, driving prices of commodities higher.

    The South Sudan economy, which relies almost exclusively on oil revenues, has been shattered by several years of civil war and this coupled with the disruptions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic has led to a drastic drop in oil prices.

    “The ministry of finance is to make all payment obligations in local currency because this is one of the major problems,” Michael Makuei said. “All the contracts that are made, even rental houses, rental cars, rental what, everything here in South Sudan is in hard currency. Why should we use the hard currency at a time when we have our national currency?” He asked.

    Makuei reiterated that all contracts are supposed to be in national currency, not in dollars, “houses are rented, when you go to the landlord he will tell you I want dollars. You want to hire a car, he will say I want dollars. Even the water from the river will soon be sold to us in dollars. If you go to any hotel, you must pay in dollars.”

    “All these are problems that are created and this is why this committee has recommended that all the transactions inside South Sudan should be by local currency except for exceptional circumstances like embassies, those going abroad, and so forth,” Makuei added.

    He said that all transactions should be done through the banks because this will help in controlling the economic crisis.

    Makuei, who is also the government spokesman, said the cabinet listened to the report of the ad hoc committee which was chaired by Cabinet Affairs Minister, Dr. Martin Elia Lomuro. The committee was set up to look into the potential ways by which South Sudan can tackle the main drivers of currency depreciation and inflation in the country.

    “The first part talked about measures to reform and strengthen the ministry of finance and planning. Part two deals with measures to reform and capacitate the Bank of South Sudan to combat the main drivers of South Sudan currency depreciation and inflation,” Makuei said.

    Source: radiotamazuj.org

  • South Sudan re-opens schools after Covid-19 closure

    Schools in South Sudan have officially reopened today after more than six months since they were closed in March as a measure to curb the spread of Covid-19.

    Two weeks ago, President Salva Kiir ordered the resumption of schools and universities as the country continues to experience a significant reduction in coronavirus infections.

    The re-opening of schools was backed by a “Back to Learning Campaign” under the theme: “Safe learning during and after the Covid-19 pandemic.”

    Addressing students and teachers on Monday, Education Minister Awut Deng Achuil said the resumption of learning is to be carried out in two phases. First will be the primary school pupils and the oldest secondary school students due to sit final exams.

    Phase two will see the re-opening of all schools in April 2021.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Floods ‘affect hundreds of thousands’ in South Sudan

    Heavy flooding has affected 500,000 people in central South Sudan, according to the UN mission in the country

    The states of Lakes and Jonglei have been worst affected.

    The head of the mission, David Shearer, told the UN Security Council on Wednesday that heavy rainfall and flooding of the Nile River had devastated parts of the country.

    “Humanitarians are working incredibly hard to help people living without shelter, food, water, and sanitation in the middle of the rainy season,” Mr Shearer told the council via video link from the capital, Juba.

    Mr Shearer added that there had been “an upturn” in conflict from splintering of armed groups.

    He said while the situation had calmed down, “tensions remain high” and effort must be made to stop a resurgence.

    Source: bbc.com

  • ‘Escaping Sudanese migrants’ killed in Libya

    Three Sudanese migrants were shot dead on Monday night after their boat was intercepted by the Libyan coastguard and they had been returned to shore.

    The International Organisation for Migration (IOM) says that the local authorities opened fire when the migrants attempted to escape from the disembarkation point at Al Khums.

    The migrants were among 70 disembarking from a vessel that was intercepted and sent back by the Libyan coast guard, reports Reuters news agency.

    Two people were killed on the spot, while a third later died in hospital.

    The IOM reiterated its call to the European Union and the international community to end the return of vulnerable people to Libya.

    “The use of excessive violence results yet again in the senseless loss of life, amid a lack of action to change a system that often fails to provide any degree of protection,” IOM Libya chief Federico Soda said in a statement.

    Source: bbc.com

  • South Sudan soldiers on trial for rights abuses

    Some 75 government soldiers arrested in Yei, a town in South Sudan’s Central Equatoria state, are being tried by military judges in the capital Juba for alleged human rights abuses.

    The special tribunal comes after a recent visit by the new Chief of Defence Forces, General Johnson Juma Okot, to Yei and surrounding areas where violence between government forces and rebels have forced civilians from their homes.

    “Rape, murder, arbitrary arrests, robbery and to some extent torture” were among the violations reported at the trial according to Jame David Kolok, attending proceedings on behalf of Foundation for Democracy and Accountable Governance (FODAG).

    He told the BBC that among the alleged victims who appeared in the court was a 14-year-old girl who said she was raped by soldiers.

    He added that many of the defendants have so far pleaded guilty to charges of rape and murder.

    No verdicts have yet been passed.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Japan donates $2.2m to fight locust invasion in South Sudan

    The Japanese government has donated $2.2 million to the fight against locust invasion in South Sudan.

    In a statement on Wednesday, Japan’s Foreign Ministry said the funds are meant to mitigate damage caused by the desert locusts.

    “In South Sudan, there are concerns that the country will face a serious food crisis due to the locusts’ damage in addition to the damage caused by the flood since last year. It is expected that the provision of relief assistance will improve the nutritional condition of approximately 49,900 people,” read the statement.

    Sudan will also receive $1.7 million grant aid while Uganda will get $600,000.

    A swarm of crop-eating locusts descended on South Sudan’s Magwi County, bordering Uganda in February, according to then Agriculture and Food Security Minister, Onyoti Adigo.

    In response, the country representative of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation said the institution immediately placed together 1,000 back sprayers to counter the invasion.

    Late in February, the US announced $8 million to support regional operations to control locusts in Ethiopia, Kenya and Somalia.

    Source: allafrica.com

  • South Sudan vice-president recovers from Covid-19

    South Sudan’s First Vice-President Riek Machar and his wife, Defence Minister Angelina Teny, have recovered from Covid-19, local media report.

    The two tested positive for coronavirus three weeks ago.

    The Sudan Tribune newspaper quoted a statement from Mr Machar’s office as saying that he had been discharged on Saturday “having fully recovered”.

    The statement further said the two government officials have been discharged after the second coronavirus confirmation tests conducted on them returned negative.

    “The two leaders are therefore expected to resume their daily active public office duties anytime soon, hopefully by Monday, 8 June, 2020,” the newspaper quotes the statement as saying.

    Source: bbc.com

  • South Sudan vice-president ‘recovers from coronavirus’

    South Sudan’s First Vice-President Riek Machar and his wife, Defence Minister Angelina Teny, have recovered from Covid-19, Sudan Tribune reports.

    The two tested positive for Coronavirus three weeks ago.

    The newspaper quoted a statement from Mr Machar’s office as saying that he had been discharged on Saturday “having fully recovered”.

    The statement further said the two government officials have been discharged after the second Coronavirus confirmation tests conducted on them returned negative.

    “The two leaders are therefore expected to resume their daily active public office duties anytime soon, hopefully by Monday, 8 June, 2020,” the newspaper quotes the statement as saying.

    Source: bbc.com

  • New South Sudan rebel group vows to overthrow Kiir

    A South Sudanese businessman and former intelligence officer says he has launched a new rebel group and intends to overthrow what he calls the corrupt leadership of the country.

    The government has not yet commented.

    Kerbino Wol has called it the Seventh of October Movement – a reference to the day of a riot at the detention facility where he was held without trial for two years.

    He was pardoned by President Salva Kiir in January.

    Despite the formation of a unity government after almost six years of civil war, correspondents say South Sudan remains fragile.

    Political rivalries have not been resolved and ethnic clashes have increased.

    Source: bbc.com

  • South Sudan minister resigns over peace deal

    A junior minister in South Sudan has resigned and accused President Salva Kiir of lacking interest to implement the 2018 peace agreement.

    Deputy Interior Minister Mabior Garang was appointed in March when Mr Kiir re-appointed the then opposition leader, Riek Machar, under the terms of the agreement.

    Mr Garang said the security situation in the country was worsening.

    Communal violence in which hundreds have been killed in Bhar-el-Gazal, Equatoria, Upper Nile, Abyei, Greater Pibor and Rweng were linked to “dismal failure to implement the security arrangements” in the peace deal.

    Mr Garang is the son of the late John Garang de Mabior.

    The rivalry between President Kiir and Mr Machar triggered a civil war that killed thousands.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Ten South Sudan ministers test positive for virus

    Ten ministers in South Sudan are now confirmed to have contracted coronavirus.

    Information Minister Michael Makuei has told the BBC that all former members of the high-level task force on coronavirus – apart from the health minister – have tested positive for Covid-19, the respiratory illness caused by the virus.

    But he has denied reports that President Salva Kiir – who was also a member of the team – had also tested positive.

    It comes just days after first Vice-President Riek Machar announced he had tested positive alongside his wife, Defence Minister Angelina Teny.

    They tested positive after coming into contact with a former member of the team, who has Covid-19.

    All the ministers infected are now in self-isolation and the government says they are in good health.

    Dozens of bodyguards and staff of the officials also tested positive and are quarantined.

    South Sudan has seen a sharp rise in coronavirus cases in recent days with 481 confirmed cases and six deaths.

    There are fears the virus could cause havoc in South Sudan, whose healthcare system is barely functioning following decades of conflict, while hundreds of thousands are living in camps for displaced people.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Aid workers among 300 killed in South Sudan clashes

    The authorities in South Sudan say at least 300 people have been killed and many more injured in the latest wave of intercommunal fighting in Jonglei state, east of the country.

    Three aid workers, including one from Médecins Sans Frontières, are among those killed.

    Fighting broke out on Saturday between the Murle and Lou Nuer communities. A local elder told the BBC that Murle youths burned down many villages in Uror county before being repulsed.

    Health workers say many of the victims have gunshot wounds. Some of the injured have been airlifted to the capital, Juba, for treatment.

    The UN Mission in South Sudan has deployed peacekeepers to the area which remains tense. Some people tried to go back to their homes but immediately returned as they feared for their safety.

    Authorities say as many as 800 people have been killed since the wave of revenge attacks begun in February.

    A treaty aimed at ending the country’s six-year civil war was signed in February, but intercommunal violence has erupted a number of times since.

    Source: bbc.com

  • South Sudan frees 85 children to decongest jails

    The United Nations says 85 children have been released from detention in South Sudan as part of efforts to ease crowding in jails during the coronavirus pandemic.

    Some 11 others will remain in prison because of the severity of their alleged offences.

    The UN Children’s Fund said those who had been freed were reunited with their parents or legal guardians.

    It said prisons in South Sudan are overcrowded, with inadequate sanitation and healthcare – conditions highly conducive to the spread of Covid-19.

    The country does not have a juvenile justice system, with many children locked in jail with adults, often for minor offences.

    Source: bbc.com

  • South Sudan govt rejects UN human rights criticism

    A senior South Sudanese official rejected criticism by the U.N. Human Rights Council that his country is a serious violator of human rights.

    Samuel Luate Lominsuk, director-general for Multilateral Affairs of South Sudan, praised the decisions and compromises made by his government, which he said enabled the formation of a national unity government.

    His government is negotiating peace with the South Sudan Opposition Alliance, he said, adding that peace talks with Sudan in the capital, Juba, are making progress.

    Lominsuk said efforts to improve the human rights situation in his country are moving ahead, which belies the U.N. council’s depiction of South Sudan as the worst country on Earth in terms of human rights violations.

    “My government would like to reiterate that South Sudan has deep-rooted traditions and norms, which compel us to respect one another in all aspects of life,” he said. “Consequently, anyone who commits a crime, touching a woman’s dignity, is severely punished.”

    A report published last week by the U.N. Commission on Human Rights in South Sudan describes what it calls the widespread and pervasive sexual and gender-based violence in the country.

    The report accuses both the government and opposition of deliberately starving the population as a tactic of war. The U.N. commission is scathing in its criticism of the government, which it says is riddled with corruption.

    The South Sudanese government did not respond to the report at the time of its release, and Lominsuk did not acknowledge the report or its findings during his address to the council.

    Instead, he stressed the positive developments and improvements in the human rights situation in his country. He also called on the council to remove South Sudan from Item Four, which looks into human rights abuses in specific countries deemed to be the worst violators.

    Countries that will come up for review under that item during the month-long session include North Korea, Myanmar, South Sudan, Iran, Burundi, Syria and Venezuela.

    Source: allafrica.com

  • South Sudanese demand leaders ‘show us there is peace’

    From behind the razor-wire fence that she is too afraid to leave, under armed protection in her own land, Jenty John Musa hears that peace is apparently coming to South Sudan.

    “We just hear on the radio, ‘There is peace, there is peace.’ But we’re not sure,” she tells AFP in Wau, where thousands fled during the carnage of the civil war seeking UN protection.

    “Let them come to us, and show us that now there is peace.”

    After a string of failed truces and hollow promises, distrust runs deep in South Sudan as its warring leaders are once again pushed to end the ruinous conflict in their young country.

    International pressure is mounting on President Salva Kiir and his former deputy, Riek Machar, to honour a February 22 deadline to form a power-sharing government in Juba.

    The old rivals signed a ceasefire in September 2018, halting five years of bloodshed that left 380,000 of their countrymen dead and four million on the run.

    But they have since missed two deadlines to form a coalition, postponing again and again a major step towards a permanent truce.

    Both men have violated past agreements, and war-weary South Sudanese are uncertain this latest detente will hold.

    Their last two experiments with governing together degenerated into appalling violence. This time, they have pledged to unify their fighters under one army to protect all South Sudanese, but the force is far from ready.

    Round after round of talks have failed to chart a path towards unity. Violence, meanwhile, has surged in parts of the country nearly the size of France, undermining what little confidence exists that peace is near.

    Hopes of a breakthrough this week in the thorny issue of carving out states were stillborn, as negotiations deadlocked once again.

    – Deja vu –

    The haggling in Juba is painfully familiar to South Sudanese in Wau, who still bear the scars of past failed efforts at peacemaking.

    The northwestern city imploded in 2016, as the “unity” government born from an earlier truce between Kiir and Machar crumbled.

    Fighting rippled out from Juba and splintered along ethnic lines in Wau, as neighbours cut each other down in the streets.

    “What I saw, I cannot forget. It’s still dangerous out there,” said Jawahier Khelifa, a mother of four.

    She and thousands of others caught in the crossfire ran to a nearby UN base, banging on the gates and begging for help.

    Three years later, thousands are still camped outside in an overcrowded tent city, too terrified to venture beyond the safety of peacekeepers.

    They are not alone.

    Nearly 190,000 people live under UN protection in such camps across South Sudan, unwilling to leave despite assurances from Juba that peace is around the corner.

    Juleta Edward, 55, has watched her children grow up in overcrowded prison-like conditions in Wau — but at least they are safe.

    She has not stepped outside the camp since June 2016 — when she fled Wau after seeing relatives being killed — and is cynical about the latest declarations of peace.

    “Experience is the best teacher,” Sam Muhumure, head of the Wau field office for the UN Mission in South Sudan, told AFP. “That’s why they are carefully watching every step the political leaders take. There has been some good progress… but the scepticism is still there.”

    – ‘Serve your people’ –

    Security has improved in Wau since Kiir and Machar agreed 18 months ago to give peace another chance.

    The truce — though not universally honoured — has delivered South Sudan its longest lull in fighting since 2013, allowing a brief window for the shattered country to rebuild.

    Farmers have returned to their fields and traders to marketplaces, helping spur a ruined economy. Aid workers have greater access to the 7.5 million people in dire need, their burden less impeded by threats and conflict.

    But as political inertia drags on, the ceasefire is being sorely tested.

    This month, UN envoys reported that pro-government and opposition forces clashed in Maiwut, driving some 8,000 civilians over the border into Ethiopia.

    “The peace dividend, for the moment, it’s still quite thin,” James Reynolds, head of delegation for the ICRC in South Sudan, told AFP.

    Those clashing in the bush are supposed to be preparing for deployment as a united army. But basic training has not begun, hamstrung by a lack of cash and political will.

    Kiir says he is ready to form a government, but the international community has warned him against doing so without Machar.

    The stalemate has frustrated the country’s backers, particularly the US, which targeted top officials with sanctions in December and has warned against another delay.

    Others, including church leaders, have appealed for Kiir and Machar to think of their people, who have been slaughtered in droves and are subjected to unimaginable atrocities by their armies.

    In Wau, people want action, not words. “Many have died. We want our leaders to focus on the people, and deliver,” Edward said.

    Source: AFP

  • Kenyan envoy to South Sudan collapses, dies

    Kenya’s Ambassador to South Sudan, Chris Karumba Mburu, is dead.

    Mr. Mburu, a former director at the National Intelligence Service (NIS), collapsed and died at his residence in Juba on Sunday, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs says.

    The official cause of death had not been established by the time this story went to press.

    He was nominated to the post by President Uhuru Kenyatta in July 2018 in changes that were made to the diplomatic service.

    He was appointed to the post at the same time as former Salaries and Remunerations Commission chairperson Sarah Serem (China) and former State House Spokesperson Manoah Esipisu (UK).

    Source: nation.co.ke

  • Uncertainty as deadline for South Sudan unity government looms

    Rival leaders in war-torn South Sudan face a February 22 deadline to form a long-delayed government of national unity.

    But just a few days before the milestone, hopes for a breakthrough dampened after Riek Machar, a former vice president and rebel leader, expressed his dissatisfaction with a peace proposal made by his rival, President Salva Kiir.

    Announcing a “painful” compromise, Kiir on Saturday said the world’s youngest country would return to a system of 10 states from 32, a key opposition demand, plus the three “administrative areas” of Pibor, Ruweng and Abyei.

    A contentious issue that has lingered for several years, the number of states is one of the main sticking points of a peace agreement that has faltered on several fronts.

    While Machar said he appreciated Kiir’s decision to “revert to 10 states”, he expressed his dissatisfaction with the creation of the three administrative areas.

    “The issue of the number of states is contentious because they are the political bases of the top politicians in South Sudan,” James Okuk, a lecture of politics at the University of Juba in the South Sudanese capital, told Al Jazeera.

    In a statement calling Kiir to reconsider his decision, Machar said the establishment of the three areas “opens up another Pandora’s box” that defeated the purpose of reverting to 10 states.

    “The refusal of Dr Riek Machar to accept the attached three administrative areas to the 10 states is a negotiating position from [his] SPLM/A-IO (Sudan People’s Liberation Movement-in-Opposition) – it is not rejection of 10 states,” Okuk said.

    When it gained independence from Sudan in 2011, South Sudan had 10 states, as set out in its constitution.

    Two years later, the country descended into war when Kiir accused his former deputy, Machar, of plotting a coup. The conflict has so far killed at least 380,000 people and forced millions from their homes, with nearly half the country in dire poverty.

    In 2015, a fragile peace deal came under further pressure when Kiir increased the number of states from 10 to 28, and later 32 – before reverting on Saturday to 10 plus the three “administrative areas”.

    Of the three areas, the oil-rich Ruweng in the north is thought to be the most contentious and the scene of some of the heaviest fighting during the war.

    Oil provides almost all of the government’s revenue, making it one of the world’s most oil-dependent nations.

    “During the war, both sides unilaterally formed their own states with new boundaries,” said Alan Boswell, a senior analyst with the International Crisis Group.

    “The dispute over the configuration of states became a major impasse blocking the peace process from moving towards a unity government,” he added.

    “Machar risks alienating the regional power brokers if he appears to be rejecting compromise,” he added.

    Under pressure from countries in the region, as well as the United States and United Nations, Kiir and Machar in 2018 signed another peace agreement.

    Under the deal, they agreed to form a unity government in May 2019 but failed to meet the deadline amid disputes over territory and security arrangements.

    A second deadline was missed in November last year and pushed back by 100 days, prompting the US to recall its ambassador and impose sanctions on senior officials for their role in perpetuating the conflict.

    Against the lingering stand-off and a battered economy, South Sudanese said they hoped for a quick resolution.

    “The decision by President Salva Kiir to revert to 10 states plus three administrative areas gives assurance that peace is closer,” Dhieu William, a Juba resident, told Al Jazeera.

    “The two parties have to show a certain degree of commitment to restore peace and win the hearts and minds of South Sudanese,” William said.

    For Okuk, the rival sides “have no other desirable alternative available except to compromise and form the new government without further delays, and then carry on with the pending tasks during the transitional period”.

    Boswell agreed.

    “A return to war cannot be an option in South Sudan, especially since the two sides stopped fighting over a year ago,” he said.

    “Ultimately, South Sudan’s regional neighbours will need to help broker a path forward between both sides to make sure the peace deal holds.”

    SOurce: aljazeera.com