JUBA, South Sudan — South Sudan’s warring parties on Wednesday agreed to a permanent cease-fire to take effect in 72 hours, as long-suffering citizens wondered whether this latest attempt at peace would fall apart as well.
South Sudan’s government confirmed the deal was signed after face-to-face talks between President Salva Kiir and opposition leader Riek Machar in Sudan. The discussions followed their meeting last week in Ethiopia, their first in nearly two years.
The new agreement also calls for the opening of corridors for humanitarian aid, the release of prisoners and the withdrawal of forces. The African Union and East African regional bloc are asked to provide forces to oversee the cease-fire. South Sudan in the three years ahead also will prepare for elections. Meanwhile Sudan and South Sudan will “immediately rehabilitate the oil fields” central to the economy, which has largely collapsed.
Tens of thousands have been killed in South Sudan’s five-year civil war, which has created Africa’s largest refugee crisis since the 1994 Rwandan genocide and left millions near famine. Multiple attempts at peace deals have failed in the past, and the United States, the country’s top humanitarian donor, has grown increasingly frustrated.
The two sides expressed mixed emotions shortly after the agreement.
“This is the president signing, so everyone in the government will have to implement it,” said government spokesman Ateny Wek Ateny. “We’re very happy with this deal.”
Expect a power-sharing agreement in the next couple of weeks, Ateny said.
Meanwhile, opposition spokesman Mabior Garang said there was no guarantee the cease-fire will work. “However, the involvement of the region is more serious now. We are cautiously optimistic.”
The latest cease-fire in December was violated within hours.
The new talks are being mediated by the East African regional bloc and its leaders, with Ethiopia’s new prime minister inviting Kiir and Machar last week for the first round and an awkward embrace. South Sudan’s government emerged saying it rejected the idea of having Machar return as Kiir’s deputy under a power-sharing deal.
The two sides, however, agreed to meet again this week in Sudan and are set to hold further talks in Kenya.
Pressure is growing from the international community to end the fighting for good amid watchdogs’ allegations that some South Sudanese officials are profiting from the conflict and blocking the path to peace.
Meanwhile, concerns grow over the fracturing of the armed opposition as some observers wonder whether a peace agreement will be accepted by all.
The U.N. Security Council early this month adopted a U.S.-sponsored resolution that threatens an arms embargo on South Sudan and sanctions against six people, including the country’s chief of defense, if fighting doesn’t stop and a political agreement reached.
This week the new U.S. ambassador to South Sudan, Thomas Hushek, told The Associated Press the U.S. was skeptical of the latest talks, saying that “if it’s just a repeat of the failed 2015 agreement (that returned Machar to his role as Kiir’s deputy) it’s not going to work.”
That agreement collapsed when fresh fighting erupted in the capital, Juba, in July 2016, with Machar fleeing the country on foot through the bush. He was later put under house arrest in South Africa. East Africa’s leaders last week announced that he can relocate anywhere but their countries.
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