S. Sudan rebel leader sets conditions for talks Ban Ki moon
Mr Ban Ki-moon

Mr Ban Ki-moon

JUBA. – UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon sought urgently on Monday to nearly double the size of the UN peacekeeping force in South Sudan, while rebel leader Riek Machar and President Salva Kiir both indicated they were ready to talk to try to end a deepening conflict that has killed hundreds of people.

A government official, however, said South Sudan would not meet Machar’s demand that detained opposition leaders be released.
Ban asked the UN Security Council to send 5 500 more peacekeepers to South Sudan as soon as possible to protect civilians from the growing violence in the world’s newest country.

There are now some 6 700 UN troops and 670 police officers making up the UN force in South Sudan.
The 15-member council met to discuss the crisis and was due to vote on a resolution approving the increase in peacekeeping troops yesterday.

“As long as these two individuals are at loggerheads, refusing to sit down with one another, innocent people are being killed on nothing other than ethnic grounds in South Sudan,” said Samantha Power, the US ambassador to the United Nations. She told reporters that Donald Booth, the US special envoy to South Sudan, had met with the detained South Sudanese opposition leaders whose release Machar was demanding and found them “secure and well and very open to ending the crisis through dialogue and reconciliation.”

Ban told reporters earlier that some 45 000 civilians were seeking protection at UN bases in South Sudan.
Booth, who met with Kiir in Juba on Monday, said the president had committed to opening talks with Machar but South Sudan Information Minister Michael Makuei told Reuters there would be no release of detained opposition leaders.

“There is no way we will release anybody who is accused of a coup d’etat,” he said.
Makuei also dismissed claims by Machar, who was South Sudan’s vice president until Kiir dismissed him in July, that his rebels have taken over all the major oil fields in Unity and Upper Nile states as “wishful thinking.”

Hours before meeting Booth, Kiir vowed to attack the town of Bor, the rebel-held capital of Jonglei State, amid deepening fears that the conflict is provoking broader ethnic bloodletting.

“President Kiir committed to me that he was ready to begin talks with Riek Machar to end the crisis without preconditions as soon as his counterpart is willing,” Booth told reporters.

“We notice that the African Union has said there is Christmas season upon us, and called for all parties to cease hostilities. We support that call,” Booth said.

Western powers and east African states, anxious to prevent the fighting from destabilizing a particularly fragile region, have tried to mediate between Machar, who hails from the Nuer tribe, and Kiir, a Dinka.

So far their efforts have been fruitless as clashes which started in Juba on December 15 entered a second week, reaching the country’s vital oil fields and destabilizing a state that won independence from Sudan only in 2011.

Hundreds of people have been killed, with reports of summary executions and ethnically targeted slayings.
Speaking from “the bush,” Machar told Reuters he had spoken to U.S. national security adviser Susan Rice and UN envoy Hilde Johnson about trying to end fighting that has killed hundreds of people and driven thousands from their homes.

“My message was let Salva Kiir release my comrades who are under detention and let them be evacuated to Addis Ababa and we can start dialogue straight away, because these are the people who would (handle) dialogue,” he said by telephone. – Reuters.

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