South Sudan accepts deployment of regional force
The move is meant to protect civilians and to help facililate a peace deal
South Sudan's government has accepted the deployment of a regional force to the country, almost a month after fighting erupted between opposing army factions, an African regional bloc said on Friday night.
South Sudan had previously rejected an outside force, but the head of the Intergovernmental Authority on Development said the government had accepted a protection force “without any precondition.”
Mahboub Maalim spoke to reporters after several regional heads of state met on the crisis. He said the timing of the deployment of the force, which is meant to protect civilians and help implement a peace deal, will be determined after regional defense chiefs meet in the coming days.
He also said the recently named first vice president, Taban Deng Gai, has agreed to step down if opposition leader Riek Machar returns to South Sudan's capital, Juba.
Mr Machar, who had been first vice president under a peace deal reached in August 2015, fled the capital into hiding shortly after the fighting began last month. His rival, President Salva Kiir, replaced him with Mr Taban, who had acted as the rebels' chief negotiator during peace talks to end a civil war that began in December 2013.
Tens of thousands of people have been killed since the civil war began, and fighting has continued despite the peace deal. The latest violence in the capital created a fresh wave of displaced people, many fleeing the country or into UN camps.
The UN human rights chief on Thursday said South Sudanese security forces had killed and raped civilians in the latest fighting.
Mr Maalim, the Igad secretary-general, told reporters that regional leaders agreed on the opening of humanitarian corridors in South Sudan for the delivery of aid. They also agreed to investigate who and what caused the latest fighting, he said.
-
South Sudan leader fires 5 ministers close to opposition
Kiir accused Machar of planning a coup, setting off a cycle of retaliatory killings that degenerated into a ruinous civil war North Africa -
UN says 60,000 have fled South Sudan since latest fighting
Almost 900,000 South Sudanese have left the country since the civil war started - UN North Africa -
UN must improve peacekeeping in South Sudan, say aid groups
Some 4.8 million South Sudanese are facing severe food shortages, according to WFP News -
UN warns South Sudan president over replacement of rival
An August peace agreement states that the vice president must be chosen by the South Sudan Armed Opposition North Africa -
Al Arabiya correspondent: South Sudan on verge of fresh violence?
A massacre of ethnic Nuer in Juba sparked South Sudan’s civil war, which began in December 2013 and raged between supporters of Kiir and Machar, ... Reports