In Juba
South
Sudan’s main opposition group, the Sudan People’s Liberation
Movement–In Opposition (SPLM-IO), is demanding the deployment of
UN-mandated forces, before the formation of a transitional government of
national unity due next month.
Speaking
in Juba, the country's capital, on Friday, Angelina Teny the head of
the SPLM-IO Defence committee said the party will not participate in the
transitional government scheduled for February 22 unless there is a
compromise to have a contingent of protection forces deployed.
The
party led by former first Vice President Riek Machar is a demanding for
what it calls assurances on safety, to have 4,000 troops sent
“sensitive areas” of the country, as a shield against reversion to
violence.
“The SPLM-IO has said we
will form the government on February 22 and we did put forward the
proposal to enable the formation of that government,” Angelina Teny told
reporters in Juba
“On the critical
issues of security, we came up with a compromise. We need to sit down
and look at the deployment of troops in some areas until such a time
that we can deliver the unified forces for the delivery of the security
services.
“This is a very big compromise for us. For us,
we see it like risk-taking because already, we see that the government
has shown reluctance in the implementation of security arrangements and
unification of forces,” Teny who is also wife of Dr Machar argued.
South
Sudan already has 7,000 non-combat UN troops under the United Nations
Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS). But they are mostly only stationed in
the capital Juba.
The demand for the
protection force is not provided for in the current peace deal signed in
September 2018 and known as the Revitalised Agreement on the
Resolution of the Conflict in South Sudan (R-ARCSS).
An
earlier agreement signed in August 2015, but which broke down had
provided for a suggestion that regional countries send 4,000 troops
known as the Regional Protection Forces or RPF to be temporary guards.
It never materialised.
Ahead of the
February 22 deadline though, main protagonists SPLM-IO and the
government under Salva Kiir have been deadlocked on when to merge the
militaries into one national army, and how to agree on the number of
regional state boundaries.
SPLM-IO
and other opposition groups argue lack of assurances on security for
their leaders will scare them away from joining the government.
On
Friday, Ms Teny also rebuked the mediators under the Intergovernmental
Authority on Development for suggesting discussions on the number of
states be continued well into the transitional government, for at least
90 days more.
“To us, they are
automatically proposing an extension of the pre-transitional period. We
felt that we want to make that clear so that we are not misunderstood,”
she said, referring to the proposal announced on Thursday by South
African Deputy President David Mabuza, after attending the Igad-led
consultative forum in Juba.
“The
legislative assembly cannot be formed without having the issue of the
number of states.” SPLM-IO has instead proposed for a committee made of
representatives from African countries in the Independent Boundaries
Commission (IBC), known as the C5 and members of the three main donors
countries known as the Troika (Norway, UK and US) to deliberate on the
issues within two weeks.
One of the
key issues is how main installations like the airport, roads, delivery
of humanitarian assistance and safeguarding of attacks on civilians and
officials will be assured during the transitional period. SPLM-IO
presumes soldiers from all sides will be in non-combat positions as they
train for a merger into a professional army.
South
Sudan has been embroiled in civil war since December 2013, following a
conflict between President Kiir and his former vice president Machar,
which has left at least 40,000 dead, five million displaced and two
million flee to neighbouring countries, according to the UN.
A peace deal signed in 2015 collapsed after the outbreak of renewed violence in July 2016, forcing Machar to flee the capital.
Under the 2018 peace deal, Machar will take up one of the four vice presidency positions in the transitional government.
But
the warring parties failed to form the transitional unity government
twice. In November, in Uganda’s Entebbe, they agreed for an additional
100 days to form it.
That deadline is due on February 22.
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