South Sudan's Kiir declines to attend IGAD summit
South Sudan’s
President Salva Kiir has decided not to take up an invitation from the East
African regional bloc IGAD to attend an extraordinary summit in the Ethiopian
capital, Addis Ababa on Monday, his office said on Thursday.
The IGAD summit, to be
attended by heads of state and government from IGAD countries, will discuss the
dire security and humanitarian situation facing South Sudan and the obstacles
to the implementation of the signed peace deal.
“There are no reasons,
but the president is attending to other things here in South Sudan. The team
that will represent the president has not yet been formed,” he added.
He pointed out that
Kiir is having other commitments within the country. However, Ateny declined to
delve into details of such commitments that Kiir will be committed to do on
Monday.
The South Sudanese
leader was expected to attend the IGAD summit in order to iron out the difficulties
in finding amicable solutions to the dire security and humanitarian situation
in his country.
The presidential
spokesman claimed that his government is implementing the 2015 peace accord and
that the national dialogue would also consolidate the peace process.
On Tuesday,
Hailemariam Desalegn, chairperson of the Intergovernmental Authority on
Development (IGAD), called for an extra-ordinary summit in Addis Ababa.
Desalegn, who is also
the Ethiopian prime minister, said the implementation of the 2015 peace deal in
South Sudan is lagging behind and that the fighting was still continuing,
despite a declaration of ceasefire and attempts to re-invigorate the national
dialogue.

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