Sudan, South Sudan resume border security talks
ADDIS ABABA — Rivals Sudan and South Sudan resumed security talks Thursday aimed at easing tensions on the disputed border, after they failed to reach a deal at negotiations last week.
The African Union-mediated talks in the Ethiopian capital first began after South Sudan's independence last July, but the latest rounds follow weeks of fighting in April that brought the two foes back to the brink of all-out war.
This round of talks is expected to last two or three days.
Dragging negotiations have so far failed to produce agreements on a raft of issues unresolved after the South's independence, including border demarcation and pipeline transit fees to transport Juba's crude through Sudan.
However, South Sudan's negotiator Pagan Amum said as he arrived for the talks he was "always optimistic".
The negotiations broke for the night with Amum laughing and shaking hands with northern delegates. Asked about the mood in Addis, he said with a smile: "You can see it for yourself".
Intense fighting along the disputed oil-rich border in April prompted the UN Security Council to pass a resolution ordering the two sides to resume talks and resolve outstanding issues by August 2.
The UN Special Representative for South Sudan Hilde Johnson said she was hopeful the talks, which are to resume Friday, would soon produce results.
"I am more hopeful that things will move in the right direction now due to external factors, such as the pressure from the international community and pressure on the economies of both countries," Johnson told reporters in Kenya.
South Sudan is gearing up for its first anniversary as an independent nation on July 9, when it split from Khartoum and took the bulk of the region's oil.
It later shut down production in a furious dispute with Khartoum, accusing it of stealing crude from the pipelines passing through Sudan on which the landlocked South depends.
"Unless South Sudan is able to access increased funding from the outside or resumes oil production, the country will face significant economic difficulties," Johnson added.
Sudan and South Sudan have since introduced tough austerity measures, sparking widespread protests in Khartoum.
The Sudanese delegation is led by senior government official Idriss Mohammed Abdel Qadir and Defence Minister Abdelrahim Mohamed Hussein, who is charged by the International Criminal Court with crimes against humanity in Darfur.
South Sudan's Defence Minister John Kong was also at the meeting.
Copyright © 2012 AFP. All rights reserved. More »
Newer articles:
- UN Security Council extends South Sudan peacekeeping mission as first ... - Washington Post - 06/07/2012 04:30
- UN Council Extends South Sudan Mission - ABC News - 06/07/2012 04:28
- UN Mission Warns of Economic, Refugee Crises in South Sudan - Voice of America - 06/07/2012 01:20
- South Sudan: Step Up Urgent Human Rights Reforms - Tolerance - 05/07/2012 20:50
- On One-Year Anniversary, Analyst says South Sudan Can Do Better - Voice of America - 05/07/2012 20:44
Older news items
- South Sudan Refugee Camp Under Water - Doctors Without Borders - 05/07/2012 17:57
- South Sudan Archivists Battle Rats, Termites, Time - Voice of America - 05/07/2012 16:13
- South Sudan: “The worst living conditions I have ever seen” - Reuters AlertNet (blog) - 05/07/2012 15:55
- South Sudan: One year after independence, health sector faces difficulties - Reuters AlertNet - 05/07/2012 15:32
- South Sudan: Disaster unfolds in world's newest nation - Daily News Analysis - 05/07/2012 10:42
Latest news items (all categories):
- INTERNAL MEMO - Appeal For Unity And Renewal Within The SPLM/A-IO - 08/06/2026 23:12
- The Tribal Marketplace: How Ethnic Associations are Capitalizing on the South Sudanese State - 08/06/2026 16:12
- Breaking The Evil Political Dominance - 08/06/2026 16:09
- African Professional Summit 2026 to Convene Leaders, Innovators, and Change-Makers in Lagos - 08/06/2026 16:05
- Reformation meets growth with the Green Corrections Initiative in South Sudan - 08/06/2026 15:57
Random articles (all categories):
- Minority teen killed by South Sudan army; military vows to continue ... - Washington Post - 25/05/2012 18:00
- Op-Ed: Sudan’s Bashir one step closer to the ICC - 13/02/2020 07:07
- South Sudan pledges six initiatives at Global Refugee Forum - 19/12/2023 06:21
- UNICEF erronous report on abducted children in Wau Shilluk - 07/03/2015 22:43
- South Sudan aims for 2.5 million tonnes of food output annually - 21/05/2016 23:06
Popular articles:
- Who is the darkest person in the world, according to Guinness World Record? - 25/10/2022 02:34 - Read 145531 times
- School exam results in South Sudan show decline - 01/04/2012 17:58 - Read 27358 times
- Top 10 weakest currency exchange rates in Africa in 2023 - 19/07/2023 00:24 - Read 24567 times
- No oil in troubled waters - 25/03/2014 15:02 - Read 23929 times
- NDSU student from South Sudan receives scholarship - In-Forum - 29/09/2012 01:44 - Read 21787 times