South Sudanese soldiers secure a road near Juba's airport on August 26,
2014. African leaders are meeting in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia for an Igad
Summit on South Sudan as they push for lasting peace solution in the
young nation. PHOTO | AFP
By AGENCIES and PSCU
In Summary
Regional leaders are meeting in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia for an
extraordinary Igad Summit on South Sudan as they push for a lasting
peace solution in the young nation.
The summit which include Assembly of Heads of State and
Government of IGAD and the African Union Ad-hoc Committee on South
Sudan, referred to as the IGAD Plus.
Fresh fighting erupted in Juba early last month between forces
loyal to President Salva Kiir and his then First Vice President Riek
Machar, threatening to move South Sudan back to civil war.
The renewed hostilities undermined a peace deal signed last August between parties involved in the South Sudan conflict.
Presidents Uhuru Kenyatta of Kenya, Uganda’s Yoweri Museveni and
Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn helped mediate the
negotiations that culminated in the signing of the peace agreement.
The regional meeting will have representatives from Djibouti,
Ethiopia, Somalia, Eritrea, Sudan, South Sudan, Kenya, Uganda and
Rwanda.
The leaders, who have backed AU and UN proposal to send troops
into South Sudan, will likely try to push the government to accept the
protection force
The meeting which is aimed at coming up with a sustainable
solution to South Sudan crisis is also being attended by representatives
from the United Nations, African Union and Joint Monitoring and
Evaluation Commission (JMEC) on the progress of the implementation of
the Permanent Ceasefire and Transitional Security Arrangements in South
Sudan.
IGAD has sharply criticised parties involved in the current
hostilities in South Sudan and expressed its displeasure on reports of
widespread and increased acts of conflict related sexual violence,
especially rape (including gang rape) of women and girls in youngest
African nation.
IGAD said the horrendous acts may in essence
constitute genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity within the
ambit of UN Security Council Resolution 1820 of 2008
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