UN Council ‘deeply alarmed’ by Sudan, South Sudan clashes
By Louis Charbonneau
UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) – The U.N. Security Council expressed alarm on Tuesday at recent clashes between Sudan and South Sudan along their disputed border and urged both sides to halt military operations, warning the fighting could escalate into a new war.
Sudan and South Sudan blamed each other for the fighting. South Sudan said its neighbor Sudan launched air strikes on major oilfields in its Unity state on Tuesday, in one of the most serious reported confrontations since the South declared independence from Sudan in July.
“The Security Council call upon the governments of Sudan and South Sudan to exercise maximum restraint and sustain purposeful dialogue in order to address peacefully the issues that are fueling the mistrust between the two countries,” the 15-nation council said in a statement.
South Sudan won its independence under a 2005 peace deal that ended decades of civil war with Khartoum, but distrust still runs deep. Both sides are still at loggerheads over the position of their shared border and how much the landlocked south should pay to transport its oil through Sudan.
“The Security Council are deeply alarmed by the military clashes in the region bordering Sudan and South Sudan, which threaten to precipitate a resumption of conflict between the two countries, worsen the humanitarian situation and lead to further civilian casualties,” 15-nation council said.
Sudan denied launching air strikes but said its ground forces had attacked southern artillery positions which had fired at the disputed oil-producing area of Heglig that is partly controlled by Khartoum.
‘PATH OF PEACE’
“Our armed forces are ready to defend every inch of our territorial integrity whether it’s an attack or aggression from the government of South Sudan or the rebel movements,” Sudan’s U.N. ambassador, Daffa-Alla Elhag Ali Osman, said on Tuesday.
He told reporters that while the U.N. Security council statement was not as strong as Khartoum would have liked, Sudan hoped it would “draw the attention of the south to come to their senses and respect the path of peace.”
Analysts have long said tensions between the countries could erupt into a full-blown war and disrupt the surrounding region, which includes some of Africa’s most promising economies.
The latest violence has already set back efforts to resolve the countries’ disputes. Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir has suspended talks with his southern counterpart Salva Kiir aimed at resolving them, state media reported.
U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said he was worried about the fighting, which started on Monday along the border.
The Security Council also voiced concern about South Kordofan and Blue Nile states. It said council members stressed “the grave urgency of delivering humanitarian aid … in order to avert a worsening of the serious crisis in Southern Kordofan and Blue Nile states, Sudan.”
Clashes broke out between Sudan’s armed forces and rebels of the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement-North (SPLM-N) in South Kordofan last June, then spread to Blue Nile state in September. Both areas border newly independent South Sudan.
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Sudanese border region sees second day of fighting over oil fields
South Sudan accuses neighbouring Sudan of dropping bombs on area as Ban Ki-Moon appeals both countries for calm.
South Sudan has accused its neighbour Sudan of waging war against it after a second day of fighting in the oil-rich border region – the worst confrontation since the countries split last year.
Ban Ki-Moon, the UN secretary-general, appealed for calm between the antagonists, which fought a long civil war before South Sudan gained independence in July last year. Oil is still the main source of hostility between the countries, which continue to spar over the border demarcation and other unresolved issues.
In a trade of claim and counter-claim, South Sudan alleged that Antonov warplanes dropped at least three bombs near oil fields in the town of Bentiu, Unity state, on Tuesday. “They are hovering and dropping over the northern part of town in the oil fields, the main Unity oil fields,” Gideon Gatpan, information minister for Unity, told the Associated Press. Sudan denied any air strikes.
The claim came a day after Sudan and South Sudan forces clashed in the border town of Jau. Each accused the other of starting the fighting.
South Sudan’s information minister, Barnaba Marial Benjamin, claimed that, “without any provocation”, Sudan bombed Jau before its ground forces and militia fighters moved in. South Sudan repulsed the “invading forces” back to the town of Heglig, Sudan, he added.
After the ominous flare-up on the border, Salva Kiir, the president of South Sudan, told a meeting in the capital, Juba: “It is a war that has been imposed on us again, but it is they [Sudan] who are looking for it,” he said.
But Sudanese authorities accused South Sudan of making the first move. Sudanese second vice-president Al-Haj Adam Yousif told state television: “These attacks are the responsibility of the SPLA [South Sudanese military] and the South Sudanese government. The SPLA attacks have targeted our oil and our army.”
Sudan alleged that the Darfur-based rebel group Justice and Equality Movement, or JEM, fought alongside the SPLA during Monday’s clash.
Mohamed Atta al-Moula, head of Sudan’s national security and intelligence services, told journalists in Khartoum: “We hope this will be no full war. We have no intentions beyond liberating our land.”
Analysts said the incidents could be the latest move in a long game of political chess. John Ashworth, a church adviser in South Sudan and resident for 29 years, said: “It’s too early to say whether this is an irreversible escalation or whether it is just another gambit in the extreme brinkmanship practised by both sides, attempting to improve their position in the on-and-off negotiations about a range of issues affecting both nations.”
Asian oil group GNPOC – the Greater Nile Petroleum Operating Company, a consortium led by China’s CNPC – confirmed Tuesday’s bombing. Hollywood actor and activist George Clooney has urged the United States to engage China on the issue, noting that China’s oil supply has been hit so there is an opportunity to appeal to its economic self-interest.
Ashworth added: “China probably has more influence in Khartoum [Sudan’s capital] than it does in Juba. There are plenty of other countries who can help South Sudan develop its oilfields, whereas Khartoum is short of friends to provide military hardware and protect it in the UN security council.
“It would be in China’s interest to protect its investment in both Sudan and South Sudan by attempting to moderate Khartoum’s military ambitions.”
The UN’s refugee agency warned that fighting in the Lake Jau border area was endangering Sudanese refugees in the nearby Yida settlement.
“Our concerns are heightened by clashes reported [on Monday] between the national armies of Sudan and South Sudan in Lake Jau and other border areas,” UNHCR’s chief spokesperson, Melissa Fleming, said in Geneva.
She added that UNHCR was in regular discussion with refugee leaders in the South Sudan settlement of Yida about “the urgent need to relocate in order to avoid civilian casualties among a population that has already endured a great deal of trauma.”
The fresh violence prompted Sudan to cancel President Omar al-Bashir’s trip to meet President Kiir next week. The leaders had been due to resume negotiations left over from a 2005 peace deal that eventually saw South Sudan secede from Sudan.
South Sudan had given assurances that Bashir would not be detained and handed over to the international criminal court, which has issued a warrant for his arrest.
Yousif said: “The visit of President Bashir was tied to good neighbourly relations. There is no way for this summit to take place now.”
But Barnaba Marial Benjamin said South Sudan still expects Bashir to attend the meeting next week. He said the “forces of war” in Khartoum were trying to derail the peace process, but not Bashir himself.
“Our president has said clearly we will not be dragged into a senseless war,” he told AP. “We will not be dragged into a conflict with Sudan.”
Earlier this year South Sudan stopped pumping oil because it said Sudan, which owns the crucial pipelines, was stealing its oil. Both countries have accused each other of supporting rebel groups on either side of the border, though both deny the allegations.
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