PaanLuel Wël Media Ltd – South Sudan

"We the willing, led by the unknowing, are doing the impossible for the ungrateful. We have done so much, with so little, for so long, we are now qualified to do anything, with nothing" By Konstantin Josef Jireček, a Czech historian, diplomat and slavist.

President of South Sudan says rival Sudan has declared war on his country

South Sudan: Rival continues aerial bombardment, attacks amount to war declaration

A policeman walks past the smouldering remains of a market in Rubkona, South Sudan, April 23, 2012. (AP Photo)

(AP) NAIROBI, Kenya – Sudan continued with its aerial bombardment of South Sudan on Tuesday, dropping eight bombs overnight, an official said, as South Sudan’s president said the attacks amounted to a declaration of war by Sudan.

South Sudan’s military spokesman Col. Philip Aguer said that Sudanese Antonovs dropped eight bombs overnight between 11 p.m. and 1 a.m. in Panakuac, where he said ground fighting had been ongoing since Sunday. Aguer said he has not received information on whether there were casualties from the attack because of poor communications.

On Monday, Sudanese warplanes bombed a market and an oil field in South Sudan, killing at least two people after Sudanese ground forces had reportedly crossed into South Sudan with tanks and artillery.

South Sudan’s President Salva Kiir on Tuesday during a visit to Beijing told China’s president that attacks by rival Sudan amount to a declaration of war on his country.

There has yet to be a formal declaration of war by either of the Sudans, and Kiir’s remark, made during talks with President Hu Jintao, signals a ratcheting up of rhetoric between the rival nations which have been teetering on the brink of war.

Kiir arrived in China late Monday for a five-day visit lobbying for economic and diplomatic support. He told Hu the visit comes at a “a very critical moment for the Republic of South Sudan because our neighbor in Khartoum has declared war on the Republic of South Sudan.”

South Sudan broke away from its neighbor and became independent last year. The two countries have been unable to resolve disputes over sharing oil revenue and determining a border. Talks broke down this month after attacks started between the two countries with South Sudan invading the oil-rich border town of Heglig, which Sudan claims it controls.

Following international pressure, South Sudan announced that it has withdrawn all its troops from Heglig but Sudan claimed its troops forced them out.

Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir has vowed to press ahead with his military campaign until all southern troops or affiliated forces are chased out of the north.

In a fiery speech to a rally Friday, after he declared the liberation of Heglig, al-Bashir said there will be no negotiations with the “poisonous insects” the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement. At the time he also said, he would never allow South Sudanese oil to pass through Sudan “even if they give us half the proceeds.”

Landlocked South Sudan stopped pumping oil through Sudan in January, accusing the government in Sudan’s capital, Khartoum, of stealing hundred millions of dollars of oil revenue. Sudan responded by bombing the South’s oil fields.

Earlier this month, South Sudan government spokesman Barnaba Marial Benjamin said Chinese and American investors want to build oil refineries in the South in the next six to seven months.

Benjamin said the refineries will help South Sudan process fuel for local consumption. South Sudan will also build a pipeline to the Kenyan coast and another to Djibouti to be able to export its oil, he said. He said both projects were meant to make South Sudan independent of Sudan’s fuel infrastructure and processing plants.

Kiir on Tuesday told Hu that he came to China because of the “great relationship” South Sudan has with China, calling it one of his country’s “economic and strategic partners.”

China’s energy needs make it deeply vested in the future of the two Sudans, and Beijing is uniquely positioned to exert influence in the conflict given its deep trade ties to the resource-rich south and decades-long diplomatic ties with Sudan’s government in the north.

Both have tried to win Beijing’s favor, but China has been careful to cultivate ties with each nation. Like others in the international community, China has repeatedly urged the two sides to return to negotiations.

http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-202_162-57419745/south-sudan-rival-continues-aerial-bombardment-attacks-amount-to-war-declaration/

NPR: The Two Sudans Appear On The Verge Of War

by COREY FLINTOFF

Sudan and South Sudan are careering closer to a full-scale war, with fighting along their ill-defined border and belligerent rhetoric coming from both sides.

The conflict threatens to cripple the fragile economies in both nations, and it could create new burdens on neighboring countries in east and central Africa, a region prone to humanitarian disaster.

In the latest developments, South Sudanese officials say that Sudan’s air force bombed its territory for a second straight day on Tuesday.

South Sudan’s President Salva Kiir, speaking while on a visit to China, said the attacks amounted to a declaration of war.

Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir has rejected any return to peace talks with South Sudan, saying the country’s leaders only understood “the language of the gun.”

The White House condemned the fighting. “Sudan must immediately halt the aerial and artillery bombardment in South Sudan,” President Obama’s spokesman, Jay Carney told reporters on Air Force One. “Both governments must agree to an immediate, unconditional cessation of hostilities and recommit to negotiations.”

The South Sudanese seized the area earlier this month amid an ongoing dispute over how much the land-locked south should pay Sudan to ship its oil by pipeline to the Red Sea.

The oil is critical to both impoverished states, and the fighting imperils the industry and could put it out of commission for an extended period.

An Incomplete Agareement

The escalating tensions comes less than a year after South Sudan formally gained independence last July as part of an earlier agreement that was supposed to end decades of fighting between northern and southern Sudan. That 2005 agreement, the Comprehensive Peace Accord, has never been fully implemented.

“A lot of the issues were neglected and left unresolved,” says Jennifer Cooke, who heads the Africa Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington.

Those critical issues include the exact demarcation of the border, the sharing of oil revenues and the status of two areas, the Blue Nile and South Kordofan, which sided with South Sudan during the many years of fighting, but remain as part of Sudan.

Oil revenues account for some 98 percent of income for the south, and a sizable chunk of Sudan’s revenues as well. The escalating dispute has halted the flow of oil since early this year.

Sudan controls the only pipeline that can carry South Sudanese oil to market, but the two sides couldn’t agree on the price that South Sudan should pay for that transport. As a result, South Sudan cut off its oil production.

“Both sides are doing things that defy rationality,” Cooke says. “The two countries need each other, but right now it’s like two people with their hands locked around each others’ throats.”

Positioned For Attacks

John Prendergast, co-founder of the human rights group, the Enough Project, cites recent satellite photos showing that Sudan has stationed warplanes at a base within striking distance of the south.

“Massive air and ground firepower has been concentrated in strategic border points that could only indicate an offensive intention.,” Prendergast says.

Satellite imagery also shows heavy damage to the Heglig oil facility, he adds, enough to stop any production for now.

Both countries stand to suffer.

Prendergast says the treasuries of both countries are nearly depleted, their currencies are losing value, and food and fuel are likely to be in short supply.

Burdens For Neighboring States

More fighting could precipitate a humanitarian crisis, says John Mukum Mbaku, of the Brookings Institution’s Africa Growth Initiative.

“If this conflict goes on,” he says, “there will be a lot of people killed.”

Mbaku says the fighting is likely to displace refugees to neighboring countries that are ill-equipped to help them. It will also make it difficult and dangerous for aid organizations to provide help for internally displaced people.

A full-scale war between the Sudans would pose serious problems for the region, says Witney Schneidman, a former State Department expert on Africa who now runs an Africa-focused business consulting firm.

“Kenya, Somalia and Ethiopia are already engaged in a hot conflict,” Schneidman says, “and this would just expand what some people fear – an emergence of an arc of crisis” from Sudan to the Horn of Africa.

“This is an environment where food insecurity is great, where al-Qaida has a presence, and where the gains in economic development could be quite fragile,” he says.

It’s time for “intensifying crisis diplomacy,” says Prendergast. “The two countries with the most influence in the region are China and the United States.”

China’s Involvement

China has invested heavily in Sudan’s oil industry, but without cooperation between the Sudans, that oil cannot flow.

China is a long-time ally of Sudan’s Bashir and has been working to develop ties with South Sudan’s leaders as well.

China’s president, Hu Jintao, signaled the importance of South Sudan by welcoming President Kiir to Beijing at the start of his five-day visit.

China’s state-run media said Hu urged both Sudans to calm down and exercise restraint.

The United Nations is demanding the same. U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon condemned Sudan’s bombing raids along the border, saying there could be “no military solution.”

http://www.npr.org/2012/04/24/151278626/the-two-sudans-appear-on-the-verge-of-war

Official: Sudan planes drop 8 bombs on South Sudan
Boston.com
South Sudan’s President Salva Kiir reviews an honor guard with Chinese President Hu Jintao, unseen, during a welcoming ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China, Tuesday, April 24, 2012. (AP Photo/Alexander F. Yuan) By Tom Odula
South Sudan needs long-term support to build on fragile gains
The Guardian
Next time someone tells you aid doesn’t work, offer them a trip to the Lora health centre in South Sudan’s Central Equatoria province, where I stood a couple of weeks ago watching the life ebb out of Frezer Wano, a five-year-old boy who had arrived in 
Sudan and South Sudan must step back from war
Reuters AlertNet
Caritas Internationalis fears that a full scale war is imminent between Sudan and South Sudan with dire humanitarian consequences for both unless there is pull back from further military action. South Sudan became independent from Sudan last July 
Sudan jets bomb South Sudan town
Sky News Australia
Sudan jets bomb South Sudan town Updated: 12:49, Tuesday April 24, 2012 Sudanese MiG jets have bombed a major town in South Sudan, increasing the prospects of all-out war. The bombs fell with a whistling sound from two MiG 29 jets and exploded, 
South Sudan Seeks Oil-Sector Help From China
Wall Street Journal
By WAYNE MA BEIJING—China has signaled an interest in a long-term role in South Sudan’s oil sector, and has offered to help build an export pipeline and provide technical help once the crisis with neighboring Sudan eases, a South Sudaneseofficial 
South Sudan: Days Ahead ‘Crucial’ to Avoid War With Sudan
Voice of America
April 24, 2012 South Sudan: Days Ahead ‘Crucial’ to Avoid War With Sudan Gabe Joselow | Nairobi, Kenya South Sudan says it will retaliate against Sudan for what it considers acts of war from its northern neighbor. Sudanese warplanes have continued 

South Sudan president says Sudan has ‘declared war’ after Sudanese jets drop 
Daily Journal
TOM ODULA AP NAIROBI, Kenya — South Sudan’s president said its northern neighbor has “declared war” on the world’s newest nation, just hours after Sudanese jets dropped eight bombs onto South Sudan on Tuesday. President Salva Kiir’s comments, 

South Sudan’s leader says Sudan has declared war
Denver Post
By ALEXA OLESEN AP South Sudan’s President Salva Kiir reviews an honor guard with Chinese President Hu Jintao, unseen, during a welcoming ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China, Tuesday, April 24, 2012. BEIJING—The president of 

White House condemns Sudan air strikes in South Sudan
MSN Money
ABOARD AIR FORCE ONE (Reuters) – The White House called on Sudan on Tuesday to stop its bombing raids of newly independent South Sudan and said the neighboring countries needed to return to the negotiating table to avoid escalation.

China’s President welcomes South Sudan President
Christian Science Monitor
The Kony 2012 campaign has made Joseph Kony infamous. But for the Ugandan troops hunting him in the jungles of central Africa, finding him remains a mammoth task. What happens when ordinary people decide to pay it forward? Extraordinary change.

President of South Sudan says rival Sudan has declared war on his country
Washington Post
BEIJING — President of South Sudan says rival Sudan has declared war on his country. Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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