By AFP
In Summary
- There was heavy fighting Monday in Bentiu a day after government troops moved to wrest back control.
- The key oil town fell into rebel hands last month, and opposition forces were accused by the United Nations of massacring hundreds of civilians.
- Both sides in the conflict have been accused of war crimes including mass killings, rape, attacks on hospitals and recruiting child soldiers.
South Sudanese troops and rebels battled in the
key oil town of Bentiu Monday as the government pushed forward a major
offensive, despite insisting peace talks would go ahead to end the
four-month long civil war.
Army spokesman Philip Aguer said there had been
heavy fighting Monday in the northern town, state capital of the
oil-producing Unity state, a day after government troops moved to wrest
back control.
"We are fighting in and around Bentiu to take back control," Aguer told AFP. "They are resisting but we have the upper hand."
Bentiu fell into rebel hands last month,
and opposition forces were accused by the United Nations of massacring
hundreds of civilians. The town has swapped hands several times.
Both sides in the conflict have been accused of
war crimes including mass killings, rape, attacks on hospitals and
places of worship and recruiting child soldiers.
The battles come just days after South Sudanese
President Salva Kiir agreed during a visit by US Secretary of State John
Kerry to hold direct talks with rebel chief Riek Machar on ending the
civil war in the world's youngest nation.
But despite the fighting, Juba said it was
committed to peace talks and that the president remained determined to
meet with his arch-rival, the former vice-president turned rebel leader
Machar.
"Of course the president (Kiir) is willing to meet
face-to-face with the rebel leader (Machar) so that they sit together
to bring peace in the country," Foreign Ministry spokesman Mayen Makol
told AFP.
"People are working on that to try to make it as soon as possible," Makol added, adding that no date has yet been set.
However, the army said that Machar is currently
hiding in remote bush after fleeing ahead of the successful capture of
his former rebel base at Nasir, a riverside town close to the border
with Ethiopia.
"We are in control of Nasir and all is quiet
there, with the forces of Machar on the run," Aguer added. "We believe
he is hiding out somewhere near the frontier with Ethiopia."
The war has claimed thousands -- and possibly tens
of thousands -- of lives, with at least 1.2 million people forced to
flee their homes, many living in appalling conditions in overstretched
UN bases and in fear of ethnic violence.
Although starting as a personal rivalry between
Kiir and Machar -- who was sacked as vice president -- the conflict has
seen armies divide along ethnic lines and fighting pitting members of
Kiir's Dinka tribe against Machar's Nuer.
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