Latest update : 2016-04-26
South Sudanese rebel leader Riek Machar was sworn in as first vice president on Tuesday, hours after he returned to the capital of Juba for the first time since conflict erupted more than two years ago.
Machar took
up the post under the terms of a peace agreement reached eight months
ago, implementation of which had been repeatedly delayed by disputes
between Machar and the government of President Salva Kiir.
“Now that Dr. Riek has taken the oath of the first vice president, we
will immediately proceed with the establishment of the transitional
government of national unity,” Kiir said after Machar was sworn in at
the president’s office. “I ask you to join me and my brother Riek Machar
in peace and reconciliation.”
Machar was greeted by government officials, members of his
SPLM-In-Opposition party, diplomats and officials from the United
Nations peacekeeping mission in South Sudan, with the airport under heavy guard, a Reuters witness said.
His return is a crucial part of the peace agreement - it was Kiir’s
sacking of Machar as his deputy that ignited the two-year war in
December 2013, which has killed thousands and displaced millions in the
world’s newest country.
But his arrival had been continually postponed since the agreement
was signed in August. Just last week, it was put off again, until
international mediators intervened to end a dispute over how many
soldiers and what weapons Machar would be allowed to bring with him.
“I am happy with the welcome that I have seen at the airport. I hope
with my arrival with shall finish with the obstacles and get into the
implementation of the government,” Machar told reporters when he
arrived.
“There are challenges that we need to overcome. The first challenge
is the stabilisation of the security situation of the country. The
second is the challenge is the stabilization of the economy.”
The conflict in South Sudan split the five-year-old country along
ethnic lines, pitting Kiir’s dominant Dinkas against Machar’s Nuer. The
fighting turned bitter enough to prompt the United Nations to set up an
inquiry into possible human-rights violations.
It also disrupted the South Sudanese economy. Oil output, on which
the government depends, has plummeted and many of the nation’s 11
million people have struggled to find food to eat.
(REUTERS)
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