
Juba — South Sudan’s loyalist troops prepared Saturday for an offensive on the last major town held by rebels, a day after recapturing the country’s main oil hub. Meanwhile the United Nations urged President Salva Kiir to release detainees in a show of goodwill to kickstartstalled peace talks in Ethiopia.
Riek Machar, the sacked vice-president who took the helm of the rebellion that formed after rival army units clashed in mid-December, remained defiant after losing Bentiu on Friday.
“We withdrew from Bentiu, but it was to avoid fighting in the streets and save civilian lives,” he said from an undisclosed location.
He vowed to defend the central town of Bor, which is the capital of the flashpoint state of Jonglei and lies around 200km north of Juba. “We fight on, we will continue the battle,” he said.
The government has said it was mobilising thousands of troops to deal a final blow to the rebellion.
Even as thousands of civilians continued to cross the White Nile to flee the fighting around Bor, loyalist soldiers crossed the river in the other direction to return to battle.
A reporter in Minkammen, a town on the opposing shore of the river hosting thousands of displaced, saw dozens of government soldiers boarding barges heading to the frontline near Bor.
A military spokesman for Machar insisted that while rebels had lost the town of Bentiu, the area’s vital oil infrastructure was still in rebel hands.
Oil exports account for more than 90 percent of South Sudan’s revenues. Output has dropped at least 20 percent since the fighting broke out in Juba on December 15.
The UN has said that “very substantially in excess” of 1,000 people have already been killed in the fighting but the ICG think tank estimated the figure was likely closer to 10,000.
A quarter of a million people have also been displaced as what started as a power struggle has morphed into a bitter civil conflict with ethnic overtones, pitting Kiir’s majority Dinka tribe aginst Machar’s Nuer community.
Top UN aid chief in South Sudan Toby Lanzer has warned of an “unfolding humanitarian catastrophe” ravaging the country, two-and-a-half years after its birth. — AFP



