KHARTOUM (Reuters) - Sudan wants to settle all its differences with South Sudan through talks, but sees little hope of a swift resolution while it believes Juba is backing rebels that threaten its territorial integrity, a senior ruling party official said on Sunday.
The African neighbors came close to a war when border fighting escalated in April, the worst violence since South Sudan split off and declared its independence a year ago under a 2005 agreement that ended decades of civil war.
The two have recently been trying to reconcile their many differences via talks, but Ibrahim Ghandour, a senior official in President Omar al-Hassan Bashir's National Congress Party (NCP), said it was hard to envisage progress without first resolving border security issues."We cannot cooperate on the economy, politics, oil, whatever, when the other party is endangering our security," Ghandour told Reuters in an interview. "We cannot build trust when the other party is supporting rebel movements with weapons and sometimes with personnel."
The duo's messy divorce left a long list of unresolved conflicts including disagreements over fees for South Sudan's oil exports and the demarcation of their shared border, as well as lingering suspicions on both sides that the other country is supporting rebel opponents.
Khartoum accuses Juba of supporting insurgencies in two of its southern border states and the western region of Darfur, the scene of a near-decade-long rebellion. Juba denies this, but some diplomats find the claim credible.
South Sudan itself often accuses Sudan of bombing its territory and said on Saturday it had suspended direct talks after another attack. Khartoum denied the bombing.
Late on Saturday, the African Union said it had managed to bring the foes back to the negotiating table.
A meeting between Sudanese President Bashir and his southern counterpart Salva Kiir that took place a week ago on the sidelines of an African Summit was billed by diplomats as a chance to inject new life into stalled bilateral talks.
But though Ghandour said it was a useful trust-building exercise, he said there had been no breakthrough.
Sudan wanted to build "very strong" cooperation with South Sudan, he added, but he questioned whether Juba was interested in a lasting settlement.
"Our history of talking to the other party will make us very cautious in being so optimistic because whenever we feel we are close to striking a deal the other party breaches whatever we had agreed upon," said Ghandour, a member of NCP's leadership team.
U.N. DEADLINE LOOMING
Talks sponsored by the African Union in Addis Ababa over where to agree a demilitarized buffer zone - seen as a first step to ending hostilities - have broken down several times.
The two countries also remain wide apart over how much landlocked South Sudan should pay to export its oil through Sudanese pipelines.
In January, Juba shut off its entire output after Khartoum started taking oil for what it called unpaid export fees. Both economies badly need the oil.
The two face the threat of sanctions from the U.N. Security Council unless they resolve all disputes before Aug 2. The Council has already expressed concern over delays in the talks.
Ghandour said South Sudan seemed to hope that friendly Western powers would pressure Sudan - a country isolated since the International Criminal Court indicted Bashir for war crimes in Darfur - into a deal on its terms.
"You know what they (South Sudan) are counting on is that we come to August 2 ... then it will be taken to international arbitration where their friends can take decisions in their interest," Ghandour said.
"This is their main aim. This is why they will be dragging their feet to August 2 but I don't think this is a very smart idea," he said.
Some two million people died in the conflict between the mainly Muslim north and the South, where most people subscribe to Christian or African animist beliefs. The war - fought over ideology, ethnicity, religion and oil - lasted for all but a few years between 1955 and 2005.
(Reporting by Ulf Laessing; Editing by Andrew Osborn)
Newer articles:
- South Sudan ups debt relief, oil fee offer for Sudan - KGMI - 23/07/2012 08:12
- South Sudan marathoner is an Olympian without a country - CNN - 23/07/2012 04:57
- South Sudanese refugees lose everything in house fire - ksl.com - 23/07/2012 00:09
- South Sudan Struggles as Foreign Currency Dries Up - Wall Street Journal - 22/07/2012 22:38
- New arrivals in South Sudan tell of worst war crimes since Darfur - The Independent - 22/07/2012 19:05
Older news items
- Food crisis hits many parts of South Sudan - The Citizen Daily - 22/07/2012 03:30
- South Sudanese Runner to Compete Without a Team - New York Times - 21/07/2012 16:37
- South Sudan accuses Sudan of bombing village - USA TODAY - 21/07/2012 13:08
- South Sudanese marathoner will run at Olympics after lobbying by Shaheen - The Hill (blog) - 21/07/2012 13:01
- South Sudan Accuses Sudan of Bombing Village - ABC News - 21/07/2012 12:59
Latest news items (all categories):
- Violence in South Sudan is rising again: what’s different this time, and how to avoid civil war - 19/03/2025 13:47
- 50,000 residents displaced by violence in South Sudan - 19/03/2025 13:44
- International community offers to facilitate South Sudan peace talks - 19/03/2025 13:40
- Poor Advisor—Bad Decision—Scenario 56' - 19/03/2025 13:37
- مالك عقار: بين نضال الأمس وخيانة الشعب الجنوب سوداني - 19/03/2025 13:27
Random articles (all categories):
- North Texas man returns to childhood home in South Sudan to install water well - Water Technology Online - 14/01/2013 11:24
- South Sudan’s civil war pushes the country toward famine - 05/01/2017 09:39
- South Sudan's Kiir dissolves all SPLM structures - 15/11/2013 15:40
- Tragedy, caution and hope as South Sudan marks eight years of independence - 08/07/2019 02:27
- Spurring intra-Africa remittances - 14/09/2022 08:00
Popular articles:
- Who is the darkest person in the world, according to Guinness World Record? - 25/10/2022 02:34 - Read 82140 times
- No oil in troubled waters - 25/03/2014 15:02 - Read 22495 times
- School exam results in South Sudan show decline - 01/04/2012 17:58 - Read 21789 times
- Top 10 weakest currency exchange rates in Africa in 2023 - 19/07/2023 00:24 - Read 19982 times
- NDSU student from South Sudan receives scholarship - In-Forum - 29/09/2012 01:44 - Read 19364 times