This article is more than
8 year oldSouth Sudan’s leaders took the first tangible step toward peace in two and a half years on Tuesday, raising hopes the young country’s nightmarish civil war could finally end.
Opposition leader Riek Mac-har landed in the capital Juba on Tuesday and was sworn in as vice president, a major boost for the peace deal signed by Mac-har and President Salva Kiir last year.
“It’s the best hope that South Sudan has had in a very long time,” U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Samantha Power said of Mac-har’s return.
Kiir and Mac-har both were prominent players in South Sudan’s long struggle against the regime in Sudan, sometimes fighting together, other times fighting each other as the war splintered into rival rebel groups.
After South Sudan won independence f-rom Sudan in 2011, Kiir became president and Mac-har his deputy, but their power struggle came to a head in 2013 when Kiir accused Mac-har of plotting a coup. The political dispute spiraled into ethnically-motivated bloodshed between Kiir’s Dinka and Mac-har’s Nuer peoples.
The war has left tens of thousands of people dead, over 2 million displaced and nearly 3 million in danger of starvation. It has been c-haracterized by horrific violence on both sides — including mass killings, systematic rape and child recruitment — which the United Nations say may amount to war crimes and crimes against humanity.
Under international pressure, Kiir and Mac-har have signed several agreements to halt the fighting that have gone nowhe-re. The latest accord, reached in August, stipulated that Mac-har join a unity government within 90 days.
But, the fighting raged on. The opposition said Kiir unilaterally reorganizing South Sudan’s states broke the accord’s commitment to share power. Mac-har said, per the agreement, he would not come back to Juba until the capital was demilitarized and his own troops were deployed as protection.
Opposition forces finally began to arrive in the capital last month, paving the way for Mac-har. But the leaders squabbled over the conditions of Mac-har’s return until the very last minute. International diplomats issued ultimatums and deadlines that came and went. At Juba airport, red carpets were unfurled and rolled up again when Mac-har failed to show up. Peace activists returned home with their white doves still in their cages.
On Tuesday, the doves were released at last, as crowds in Juba airport celebrated Mac-har’s return.
“The war was vicious and we have lost a lot of people in it,” Mac-har told reporters at the airport on Tuesday. “We need to bring our people together so that they can unite, reconcile, and heal the wounds, the mental wounds, that they have.”
This is a daunting task, even with the best of intentions. The peace agreement calls for elections after two years, the reintegration of the army and rebel forces, and the launch of a special court to hold the worst abusers accountable.
Mac-har expressed confidence that obstacles could be overcome with political will, while Kiir promised to solve their many unresolved issues “amicably.”
Yet after days, months and years of empty promises, some analysts cautioned that only time will tell how sincere the leaders are about forging a lasting peace.
“We need the guns to stay silent and give people time — both as official warring parties and as individuals — with one another in coming days,” International Crisis Group’s Casie Copeland wrote on Twitter. An outbreak of fighting in the northern town of Bentiu on Monday night “shows how fragile this endeavor is and that peace requires everyone’s efforts,” Copeland said.
A local leader said thousands sheltering f-rom violence at a U.N. base in Juba won’t risk leaving the camp until they are certain that peace will take hold. “We need to know the leaders of South Sudan can show us that this peace is a real peace,” Thod Mayei told the Associated Press.
Newer articles
<p>The deployment of Kim Jong-un’s troops has added fuel to the growing fire in recent weeks. Now there are claims Vladimir Putin has put them to use.</p>