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Sudan rejects Council role in South row

Sun, 29 April 2012

KHARTOUM — Sudan yesterday ruled out UN Security Council involvement in efforts to end weeks of border clashes with South Sudan, which said it repelled an attack by Khartoum-backed dissidents. “Sudan confirms that it rejects any efforts to disturb the African Union role and take the situation between Sudan and South Sudan to the UN Security Council,” Foreign Minister Ali Karti said after a month of deadly clashes which have raised fears of a wider war.

The African Union itself, in a decision last Tuesday, asked the Security Council to endorse its demand that the two Sudans halt hostilities in 48 hours, start talks within two weeks and complete a peace accord in three months. But Karti — while expressing full confidence in the AU’s role — said in a statement that Security Council involvement would “give priority to a political position which was announced before and has a hidden agenda.”
The South Sudanese army said yesterday it had repelled an attack by dissidents backed by Sudan outside Malakal, capital of the South’s Upper Nile State.
“It was Sudan-supported militias that attacked SPLA (South Sudan army) positions” on Friday, Colonel Philip Aguer said. He said his forces repulsed the attack, with an unknown number of casualties.
But the dissidents claimed that the “South Sudan Democratic Army (SSDA) launched Operation Ending Corruption and surrounded Malakal... and captured its surroundings.”
Aguer said South Sudan’s forces had detained three dissident fighters and one vehicle.
The Security Council on Thursday started talks on a resolution that could allow sanctions against Sudan and South Sudan if they do not meet the AU demands to end their fighting.
A resolution drafted by the United States backs
the AU decision and calls for the two sides to “immediately” halt hostilities and pull their forces back into their own territory. — AFP