Uganda's president Yoweri Museveni said on Monday East African
nations had agreed to unite to defeat South Sudanese rebel leader Riek
Machar if he rejected a ceasefire offer, threatening to turn an outburst
of ethnic fighting into a regional conflict.
Machar has responded coolly to the ceasefire offer and the army has said it has continued to fight his soldiers. Thousands of people fled South Sudan's flashpoint town of Bor as the army warned of an imminent attack by the Nuer "White Army" militia on Monday, officials said.
Two weeks of clashes have already killed at least 1 000 people in the
world's newest nation, rocked oil markets and raised fears of a civil
war in a region ravaged by fighting in Central African Republic and
Democratic Republic of Congo.
"We gave Riek Machar four days to respond [to the ceasefire offer]
and if he doesn't we shall have to go for him, all of us. That is what
we agreed in Nairobi," Ugandan president Yoweri Museveni told reporters
in South Sudan's capital, Juba.
Asked what that meant, Museveni said: "to defeat him".
There was no immediate confirmation of the pact from other countries,
including economic powerhouses Kenya and Ethiopia, who have been trying
to mediate and last week gave the sides until December 31 to lay down
their weapons.
The United Nations, Washington, and other Western countries who have
poured millions of dollars of aid into South Sudan since it won its
independence from Sudan in 2011, have also scrambled to stem the unrest.
Fighting between rival groups of soldiers erupted in the capital Juba
on December 15, then triggered clashes in half of South Sudan's 10
states - often along ethnic lines, between Machar's group, the Nuer, and
President Salva Kiir's Dinka.
Kiir, who sacked Machar in July, accused him of starting the fighting in a bid to seize power - a charge denied by Machar.
He has since retreated into the bush and acknowledged he is leading
rebel fighters. The fighting, alongside unrest in Libya, has lifted oil
prices, holding it above $112 a barrel on Monday.
South Sudan has the third-largest oil reserves in sub-Saharan Africa after Angola and Nigeria, according to BP.
White army threat
Machar has responded coolly to the ceasefire offer and the army has said it has continued to fight his soldiers. Thousands of people fled South Sudan's flashpoint town of Bor as the army warned of an imminent attack by the Nuer "White Army" militia on Monday, officials said.
The White Army – made up of Nuer youths who dust their bodies in
white ash – has in the past sided with Machar. But a spokesperson for
the government of South Sudan's Unity state, now controlled by forces
loyal to Machar, on Sunday denied he was in control of the White Army
fighters, raising the prospect that the violence was spreading beyond
the control of widely-recognised ethnic leaders.
"The [White Army] are now not very far from Bor so an attack is
imminent," Sudan army (SPLA) spokesperson Philip Aguer said by phone
from Juba, 190 km south of Bor by road. Civilians had fled the town,
crossing the White Nile river and heading for the swamps, Information
Minister Michael Makuei told Reuters.
Nuer militias massacred Dinkas in Bor during an outburst of ethnic
fighting in 1991. Bor's mayor, Nhial Majak Nhial, said he was urging
civilians to escape Bor, the capital of Jonglei state, as the White Army
militia neared.
"They have attacked the village of Mathiang, killing civilians and
burning civilian houses down. They are butchering civilians," Nhial told
Reuters from Bor.
The reports of clashes and advances came from remote areas largely
inaccessible to journalists and it was not possible to verify them
independently.
SPLA spokesperson Aguer said an SPLA reconnaissance unit clashed with
White Army militia on Sunday night. Tribal elders over the weekend
persuaded many of the Nuer youths to abandon their march, but officials
said about 5 000 refused to turn back.
"People in Bor are scared," Makuei told Reuters. "Some of them have
turned towards the swamps, and motorboats are crossing frequently to the
other bank of the [White Nile] river. – Reuters
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