South Sudan rebel leader Riek Machar
agreed to send envoys to peace negotiations in Ethiopia Tuesday, but
rejected face-to-face talks with President Salva Kiir, warning that his
forces will continue to fight.
Machar, a former vice
president accused of sparking deadly conflict by attempting a coup over
two weeks ago, said his troops were still marching on the capital after
claiming to have recaptured a key town.
"Our forces are
still marching on Juba, there is no cessation of hostilities yet,"
Machar told AFP via satellite telephone from an undisclosed location
inside South Sudan.
Ignoring a deadline from regional
powers for an immediate ceasefire, he said any halt in the more than two
weeks of fighting "needed to be negotiated"
.
.
"That is
what the delegation is going to Addis Ababa to discuss and to
negotiate," he said, adding the chance of him meeting with Kiir in
person "depends on how the negotiations go".
The United
States, which was a key backer of South Sudan's independence struggle,
said the sending of negotiators was an "important first step", special
envoy Donald Booth said.
Officials in the Ethiopian
capital confirmed that delegations from both sides were due to land in
Addis Ababa, the headquarters of the African Union, later Tuesday with
talks expected to start on Wednesday.
"I will follow
later, once the negotiations have resulted in a cessation of
hostilities. It depends on if and when that is achieved," Machar said.
"We
did not ask for this battle, it was forced upon us," Machar added,
reiterating his position that it was the president who started the
fighting on December 15.
South Sudan is the world's
youngest nation, having only won independence from Khartoum in 2011, but
has been beset by poverty, corruption and ethnic tensions, including
between the president's Dinka tribe -- the largest in the country -- and
Machar's Nuer community.
Thousands of people are
feared to have been killed in over two weeks of fighting, pitching army
units loyal to Kiir against a loose alliance of ethnic militia forces
and mutinous army commanders nominally headed by Machar.
The
AU expressed "Africa's dismay and disappointment that the continent's
newest nation should descend so quickly into civil strife", warning of
its potential to deteriorate into "full-fledged civil war" -- even
though many observers say this has already happened.
Heavy
fighting continued to rage on Tuesday, with the rebels claiming they
had recaptured Bor, capital of the powder-keg Jonglei state and situated
just 200 kilometres (125 miles) north of the capital Juba -- the third
time the town has changed hands in two weeks
.
.
"Bor is under our control... we are now in Bor town," rebel spokesman Moses Ruai told AFP.
South
Sudanese army spokesman Philip Aguer disputed the claim, saying the
fighting was ongoing inside the town. A UN spokesman had also confirmed
the town was under attack earlier Tuesday.
'Full-fledged civil war'
Thousands
have fled in recent days from Bor in fear of a counter-attack by rebels
-- including an ethnic militia force dubbed the "White Army".
Across
the country, the United Nations has estimated close to 200,000 people
have been forced to flee their homes, of which 75,000 have sought
protection from badly overstretched UN peacekeepers.
Fierce
battles have been reported in strategic oil-producing areas -- with
rebels controlling Bentiu, state capital of the key state of Unity, as
well parts of the oil-rich Upper Nile State.
Industry sources say South Sudan's oil production has dropped by around a fifth because of the fighting.
There
have also been grim reports of massacres, rapes and killings, prompting
the African Union to threaten "targeted sanctions" over the conflict.
East
Africa's regional IGAD bloc headed by Ethiopia -- which had set Tuesday
as the deadline for talks to start -- said that negotiations "will
focus on a monitored ceasefire" before more talks to settle "underlying
political problems."
Kiir has described the war as "senseless", but ruled out power sharing with the rebels.
"What power sharing? It is not an option.
This man has rebelled.
If
you want power, you don't rebel so that you are awarded with the
power," Kiir said in an interview broadcast on the BBC Tuesday.
A
key rebel demand has been the release of several top level political
leaders arrested hours after the fighting began, but Kiir said they must
follow the court process.
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Ugandan President Yoweri
Museveni has also warned that Machar must comply with the ceasefire deal
or face action by regional nations.
He said if Machar does not respond "we shall have to go for him," without clarifying if his threat involved military action.
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