The US ambassador to South Sudan on Wednesday warned that Washington would not hesitate to slap additional sanctions on "spoilers" holding back peace in the war-torn African nation.
Ambassador Thomas Hushek was recalled in November when South Sudan's rival leaders failed to meet a promised deadline to form a unity government, straining ties with Washington.
The United States this week slapped sanctions on two South Sudan ministers, accusing them of obstructing a peace accord signed in 2018 that has paused, but not resolved, five years of conflict.
Hushek stood by the decision -- which was criticised by the office of South Sudan President Salva Kiir -- and warned of further measures if peace talks failed to advance.
"We are looking at all spoilers of the peace process," Hushek told reporters in Juba during his first press briefing since returning from Washington.
"Sanctions... is one of the tools we will continue to have in our tool box, and we will use them."
Kiir and his former deputy, Riek Machar, agreed Tuesday to form a power-sharing government before a February deadline.
The pledge to join forces is the linchpin of the truce signed by Kiir and Machar, whose falling out in 2013 kicked off fighting that left nearly 400,000 South Sudanese dead.
But they have missed two deadlines to do so, most recently in November, when the pair were given another 100 days to come together in a coalition.
The US, frustrated at repeat delays, and having warned of consequences if the men stalled again, recalled Hushek in protest, and announced it was reevaluating its relationship with South Sudan.
"There have been missed deadlines all throughout this process," Hushek said.
"If the process moves forward, this is the way to prevent future sanctions."
Earlier this month the US also restricted visas to South Sudanese determined to have undermined the road to peace.
Talks between Kiir and Machar, a former rebel leader who lives in exile, have stumbled over disagreements about territorial boundaries in South Sudan, and a pledge to unify their fighters in a national army.
Successive peace deals and mediation bids have failed to achieve a lasting peace for the world's youngest country, whose independence from Sudan in 2011 was strongly backed by the US.
The September 2018 ceasefire signed by the warring parties has largely held, delivering the longest period of peace in South Sudan's short history as a nation.
United Nations special envoy to South Sudan David Shearer said Wednesday that delays in the transition to peace had eroded trust and stoked fears that "political will between parties is waning".
"The choices that South Sudan's leaders make now will determine this country's future for generations to come," he told the Security Council.
str-np/ri
Newer articles:
- Statement by Susan Dickson, UK Minister Counsellor and Legal Adviser at the UN, at the Security Council briefing on Sudan and South Sudan - 19/12/2019 01:28
- Future of South Sudan depends on choices of leaders - UN envoy - 18/12/2019 20:47
- Statement by Ambassador Jonathan Allen, UK Deputy Permanent Representative to the UN, at the Security Council briefing on South Sudan - 18/12/2019 08:17
- South Sudan: Humanitarian Access Snapshot (November 2019) - 18/12/2019 07:51
- SOUTH SUDAN: US envoy warns Kiir, Machar and ‘spoilers’ - 18/12/2019 06:59
Older news items
- South Sudan close to peace deal, but rural conflicts remain - 18/12/2019 03:21
- South Sudan: political will needed to form a unified government, on the road to peace - 17/12/2019 20:43
- South Sudan Leaders Agree to Unity Government by Mid-February - 17/12/2019 06:00
- Indian peacekeepers in South Sudan receive prestigious UN medal - 16/12/2019 16:05
- US puts two South Sudan ministers on sanctions list - 16/12/2019 10:27
Latest news items (all categories):
- INTERNAL MEMO - A Call for Unity and Wisdom in the SPLM/A-IO - 15/07/2026 15:28
- Kenya and South Sudan seek to strengthen bilateral ties through enhanced security collaboration - 15/07/2026 15:24
- Sudan Rejects South Sudan’s Decision to Include Abyei in Electoral Constituencies, Calling It a Breach of Existing Agreements - 15/07/2026 15:20
- Regional race against Ebola as Congo outbreak accelerates towards South Sudan - 15/07/2026 15:17
- UNHCR South Sudan Population Overview of Refugees and Asylum-seekers (As of 30 June 2026) - 15/07/2026 15:10
Random articles (all categories):
- Juba peace talks: Progress on northern Sudan track - 01/01/2020 04:02
- South Sudan's warring forces "recruiting children" - 16/02/2015 09:40
- Heavy rainfall affects White Nile camp for South Sudanese refugees - 30/07/2021 03:34
- Why Russia’s invasion of Ukraine still divides Africa - 25/02/2023 00:20
- ADVERTISEMENT of the two national Community Health positions (1 for Secretariat/Coordination technical support and 1 for Community M&E support) - July 27 deadline - 16/07/2018 16:53
Popular articles:
- Who is the darkest person in the world, according to Guinness World Record? - 25/10/2022 02:34 - Read 147796 times
- School exam results in South Sudan show decline - 01/04/2012 17:58 - Read 27850 times
- Top 10 weakest currency exchange rates in Africa in 2023 - 19/07/2023 00:24 - Read 24940 times
- No oil in troubled waters - 25/03/2014 15:02 - Read 24260 times
- NDSU student from South Sudan receives scholarship - In-Forum - 29/09/2012 01:44 - Read 22178 times