South Sudan president agrees to meet rebel leader, Kerry says
The meeting will be the first to be held since South Sudan's civil war broke out four months ago
South Sudan's President Salva Kiir has agreed to Ethiopian-mediated and direct talks with rebel leader Riek Machar aimed at implementing a ceasefire and setting up a transitional government, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry announced Friday.
Speaking to reporters in Juba, Kerry said President Kiir was "willing to travel to Addis Ababa in the near term, sometime early next week hopefully in order to engage in a discussion with the (Ethiopian) prime minister and hopefully with Riek Machar."
Kerry said that Machar had already agreed to such a meeting, but that he would be holding further telephone talks with him later Friday to set up the face-to-face talks -- which would be the first to be held since South Sudan's civil war broke out four months ago.
"It is safe to say that President Kiir was very open... to take forceful steps in order to end the violence and implement the cessation of hostilities agreement and to begin to engage with respect to a transitional government," Kerry told reporters.
"This meeting between Riek Machar and President Kiir is critical to be able to really engage in a serious way on how the cessation of hostilities agreement will now once and for all really be implemented," he added.
Kerry flew into Juba earlier Friday on an unannounced visit to push for peace, amid mounting international outrage over atrocities and war crimes, and with the UN and aid agencies warning that the country is on the brink of famine.
Thousands of people have already been killed -- and possibly tens of thousands -- and at least 1.2 million forced to flee their homes since rival troops loyal to President Kiir and his sacked vice president Machar started fighting on December 15.
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