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[Dehai-WN] (Reuters): South Sudan says Sudan air strikes amount to war

From: Berhane Habtemariam <Berhane.Habtemariam_at_gmx.de_at_dehai.org>
Date: Tue, 24 Apr 2012 17:15:10 +0200

South Sudan says Sudan air strikes amount to war


Tue Apr 24, 2012 2:59pm GMT

* Juba accuses Khartoum of more aerial bombardments

* Khartoum says not willing to negotiate with foe

* Beijing calls for restraint

By Yara Bayoumy and Michael Martina

JUBA/BEIJING, April 24 (Reuters) - South Sudan accused Sudan on Tuesday of
mounting bombing raids on the newly independent country's oil-producing
border region and President Salva Kiir said the latest hostilities amounted
to a declaration of a war by his northern neighbour.

Weeks of cross-border fighting between the former civil war foes have
threatened to escalate into a full blown conflict in a region that sits on
one of the most significant oil reserves in Africa.

Although both Sudan, ruled by President Omar al-Bashir since 1989, and South
Sudan, which became independent last July under a peace deal with Khartoum,
can ill-afford a protracted war, both countries have fuelled tensions with
bellicose rhetoric.

Philip Aguer, spokesman for South Sudan's army, or the SPLA, said Sudanese
Antonov aircraft had flown up to 40 km (25 miles) into South Sudan's
territory to bomb the settlements of Teschween, Panakuach and Roliaq. Taban
Deng Gai, governor of Unity State where the raids occurred, said bombs had
hit Lalop market and Panakuach.

The raids came a day after the SPLA said Sudan bombed a market near the oil
town of Bentiu, capital of Unity state, and killed two civilians, an attack
they said amounted to a declaration of war. The United Nations condemned the
attack.

The Sudanese army denied carrying out air strikes.

Speaking in China, which has significant oil and business interests in both
African countries, Kiir said Sudan had declared on his country.

"It (this visit) comes at a very critical moment for the Republic of South
Sudan because our neighbour in Khartoum has declared war on the Sudan," he
told Chinese President Hu Jintao.

Hu called for restraint, urging the two neighbours to settle their disputes
through peaceful negotiations.

"The urgent task is to actively cooperate with the mediation efforts of the
international community and halt armed conflict in the border areas,"
China's state television paraphrased Hu as telling Kiir.

South Sudan said on Friday it would withdrew from the disputed Heglig
oilfield it seized earlier this month, bowing to demands from the U.N.
Security Council.

The SPLA's withdrawal from the oilfield, which used to produce about half of
Sudan's total oil output, reduced the risk of an all-out war but Juba has
accused Khartoum of daily air bombardments on its territories since then.

"We have not declared war but the SPLA is on maximum alert because if they
attack they will not (catch) the SPLA off guard, Aguer told reporters in
Juba.

"If they don't stop bombardment, if they don't stop the incursion into our
territories, I assure you the SPLA is capable of retaking all of these areas
that they are occupying by force," he said.

CHINA URGES RESTRAINT

South Sudan became independent last year, breaking up what was Africa's
largest country under a 2005 peace agreement that ended two decades of civil
war.

But the two territories have yet to settle a long list of disputes including
the position of their shared border, the ownership of critical territories
and how much the landlocked South should pay in oil transit fees to Sudan.

The disputes have already halted nearly all oil production, choking the two
countries' largely oil-dependent economies.

For China, the standoff shows how its economic expansion abroad has at times
forced Beijing to deal with distant quarrels it would like to avoid.

A South Sudanese official, deputy chief of protocol Gum Bol Noah, said China
had agreed to provide technical assistance on an alternative oil pipeline to
Kenya, but would wait until the situation was calmer.

Juba has said it wants to build a pipeline within one year to end its
dependency on Sudan's oil transit and export facilities, but experts say the
project is not viable without significant new oil discoveries.

Bashir has ruled out a return to negotiations with Juba, saying the South's
government only understands "the language of guns".

South Sudan Information Minister Barnaba Marial Benjamin said Kiir's visit
to China was intended to improve relations that were strained after Juba
expelled the head of a China-led oil consortium it accused of helping Sudan
to "steal" southern oil.

"The relations we have been having with them (China), with Khartoum on the
other side, have not been clear," he told reporters in Juba.

"There must be some sort of relationship where China can play a positive
role, even in this war. You see it is like a case of a husband with two
wives," he said referring to China's relationship with both Sudans.
(Additional reporting by Hereward Holland in Bentiu, South Sudan; Ben
Blanchard in Beijing; Writing by Yara Bayoumy; Editing by Giles Elgood)

C Thomson Reuters 2012 All rights reserved

 




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