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From: John Ashworth <[email protected]>
To: "Group" <[email protected]>
Date: Saturday, May 12, 2012 6:23:01 PM GMT+0300
Subject: [sudan-john-ashworth] Sudan and South Sudan contest 60% of border

Sudan and South Sudan contest 60% of borderline – Machar

May 11, 2012 (JUBA) – The Vice President of South Sudan, Riek Machar
said Friday that only 40% of the international border between Sudan
and newly-independent South Sudan has been agreed in principle,
dismissing Khartoum’s claim that 80% has been agreed.

Even the 40% of the oil-rich border, which had been agreed had not
been demarcated on the ground, Machar said. The two nations clashed
heavily in the disputed area of Heglig/Panthou in March and April,
which is in South Kordofan State, according to Khartoum and in Unity
State, according to Juba.

A peace agreement in 2005 between Khartoum and former rebels the Sudan
People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM) did not resolve many of the
disputes that triggered or perpetuated the two-decade conflict.
Instead it created mechanisms, such as joint committees on borders and
contested areas, to find solutions to contentious issues.

However, after six years of sharing wealth and power South Sudan
seceded in July 2011 with many of the issues still up in the air, such
as the location of the new 1,800km international border and how much
landlocked South Sudan would pay Sudan to exports its oil through
Northern infrastructure.

The impasse over the border and oil — South Sudan took with its 75% of
production when it seceded — have culminated in border clashes over
the past two months that have threatened to drag the Sudans back to
war. Two million people died in the last conflict, which affected the
whole region.

South Sudan has accused Sudan of illegally annexing the Heglig area —
known as Panthou in Dinka dialect — in the 1970s after oil was
discovered. Khartoum denies this. Sudan also refutes the UN’s reports
that Sudan has bombed South Sudan on numerous occasion; over 80 times
according to some South Sudan officials. Juba, in turn, denies
supporting Sudanese rebels north of the border.

Addressing a conference in Torit, capital of Eastern Equatoria on
Thursday during the launch of a development and investment plan for
the state, South Sudan’s Vice President, Riek Machar, called on youth
to prepare for all eventualities over the border conflict with Sudan.

Machar chairs South Sudan’s national mobilisation committee, which has
been recruiting young men into the country’s armed forces in case the
relatively localised fighting spreads along the tense and highly
militarised border.

Sudan has also put its border areas on a war footing, declaring a
state of emergency on all states bordering South Sudan and launching
nationwide recruitment campaigns for its army and paramilitaries.

Machar said that even before Southern secession, during the six year
interim period of the 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement, Khartoum had
been forcefully encroaching into the territories of South Sudan.

The semi-autonomous government in South Sudan had not forcefully
responded during interim period, Machar said, because it did not want
to jeapordise the region’s January 2011 self determination referendum.

He asserted that South Sudan was under attack by the Sudan Armed
Forces, which were trying to annex South Sudanese territories.

Machar reiterated his government’s quest for a peaceful solution to
the demarcation of the borders, but added that the new country has the
right to self-defense and can respond in kind should Sudan continue
it’s aggression.

He called on Eastern Equatoria State to mobilise both human and
material resources for the front line, emphasing the importance of
morale in supporting the national army.

The world’s youngest state adopted its new map on 4 May incorporating
all five disputed the areas that are disputed with Sudan, as well as
Heglig/Panthou.

On Friday the cabinet adopted the new official map, which replaced the
Arabic names given by the Khartoum government with “indigenous” names,
according to South Sudan’s official spokesman, Barnaba Marial
Benjamin.

Khartoum has a rival map which claims the same territories. Sudan
claims that Juba is illegally occupying the areas.

Officials of the newly independent country say they have documents
which prove the ownership of the areas, confident that they would win
the case in an international tribunal. Khartoum, has rejected turning
the matter over to a tribunal.

Sudan’s ambassador to the United Kingdom has said Khartoum would be
willing to go for arbitration if certain security measures are met,
however, it is unclear that this represents an official change of
policy.

South Sudan has accused Khartoum of defying resolution 2046 of the
United Nations Security Council, which seeks peaceful resolution of
the border conflict, by carrying out fresh aerial bombardments
covering the three states of Upper Nile, Unity and Western Bahr el
Ghazal.

Khartoum has said that it will not return to talks until Juba admits
that it supports Sudanese rebels the Sudan People’s Liberation
Movement - Northern Sector. Ceasing backing of rebels in the other’s
territory was another demand of the UNSC resolution.

(ST) http://www.sudantribune.com/Sudan-and-South-Sudan-contest-60,42563

END
______________________
John Ashworth

Sudan, South Sudan Advisor

[email protected]

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