South Sudan's rebel leader Riek Machar (centre) arrives at Juba
international airport with his wife to attend a peace ceremony in Juba,
South Sudan, on October 31, 2018. PHOTO | AKUOT CHOL | AFP
South Sudan's rebel leader Riek Machar is planning to return to
Juba in May under a power-sharing deal that a UN envoy said Tuesday
offered the "best chance" of ending the war.
UN envoy
David Shearer met last week with Machar in his exiled home in Khartoum
to discuss plans for a transitional government that will pave the way to
elections, under the terms of a peace plan signed in September.
"He
told me that he is committed to coming back still at the end of May,"
Shearer told a news conference at UN headquarters in New York, adding
that his return will mark a "critical juncture" toward setting up the
transitional government.
The peace agreement brokered by Sudan reinstates Machar as vice-president and is aimed at ending the brutal five-year war.
"There are some tricky issues still to be resolved," said Shearer, who has been UN envoy to South Sudan since January 2017.
"But
it's an agreement that is there that we feel offers the best chance in a
long while for moving South Sudan in the right direction."
A visit by UN Secretary General Antonio
Guterres to show support for the new peace effort in South Sudan had
been planned for February but was pushed back to later this year when
both Machar and President Salva Kiir will be in Juba, Shearer said.
South Sudan descended into war in December 2013 when Kiir accused Machar, his former deputy, of plotting a coup.
Fighting
Under
a previous deal, Machar returned from exile with a group of bodyguards
in July 2016, sparking a major battle in Juba that forced the rebel
leader to flee the country after being targeted by government troops.
Shearer
said security arrangements for Machar's return from Khartoum had not
yet been decided. Machar briefly returned to Juba in October to attend a
peace ceremony.
Since the peace deal
was signed, "fighting has diminished greatly", said Shearer, prompting
many South Sudanese who have sought refuge near UN bases to return to
their homes.
About 193,000 people are
sheltering at UN-protected sites, compared to 205,000 five months ago.
The United Nations has about 15,000 troops and police serving in the
peacekeeping mission known as UNMISS.
The
war has uprooted over one third of South Sudan's 12 million people and
has seen horrific levels of sexual violence along with brutal attacks on
civilians.
No comments :
Post a Comment