South Sudan govt, rebel groups sign IGAD ceasefire deal in Ethiopia
South Sudan’s government and rebel groups signed a ceasefire on Thursday in the latest attempt to end a four-year civil war and allow humanitarian groups access to civilians caught in the fighting.
The ceasefire aims to revive a 2015
peace deal that collapsed last year after heavy fighting broke out in South
Sudan’s capital Juba. It was agreed after talks in the Ethiopian capital Addis
Ababa convened by regional bloc IGAD.
A decision by President Salva Kiir to
sack his deputy Riek Machar triggered the war in the world’s youngest country.
The war has been fought largely along ethnic lines between forces loyal to
Kiir, who is Dinka, and Machar, who is Nuer.
There is no longer any excuse for the
violations of human rights. All parties are obliged to observe cessation of
hostilities agreement.
Tens of thousands have died and a
third of the population of 12 million have fled their homes. The conflict has
since mutated from a two-way fight into one involving multiple parties and this
has made it harder to find peace.
Representatives of Kiir and Machar
were both present at the signing.
“I do hope in signing this agreement,
you will try to put an end to this tragedy …. This is an encouraging first
phase,” said Moussa Faki Mahamat, chairperson of the African Union Commission.
Ethiopia’s Foreign Minister Workneh
Gebeyehu, also present, said: ”There is no longer any excuse for the violations
of human rights. All parties are obliged to observe cessation of hostilities
agreement.
Diplomats at the talks told Reuters
the next phase of the negotiations would now centre on thrashing out a revised
power-sharing arrangement leading up to a new date for polls.
REUTERS
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