In an attempt to end years
of ruinous conflict that has killed almost 400,000 and forced millions from
their homes, rival leaders in South Sudan have formed a transitional coalition government.
Opposition leader Riek
Machar was sworn in on Saturday in the capital, Juba, as the first deputy of
President Salva Kiir a day after the previous government was dissolved.
"I do hereby swear
that I shall be faithful and bear diligence to the Republic of South
Sudan," Machar said in his oath in front of a room packed with diplomats
and regional representatives, including Sudanese leader General Abdel
Fattah al-Burhan.
Amid applause, Machar embraced and shook
hands with Kiir.
For his part, Kiir declared "the
official end of the war, and we can now proclaim a new dawn". Peace is
"never to be shaken ever again", the president said, adding that he
had forgiven Machar and asking for Machar's forgiveness, to applause. He called
on their respective Dinka and Nuer ethnic groups to do the same.
Kiir and Machar started out as president
and deputy at independence from Sudan in 2011. But two years later, Kiir sacked
Machar and later accused him of attempting a coup against him, sparking a
bloody war characterised by ethnic conflict.
When that deal fell apart in July 2016, the capital was plunged into a brutal battle between rival armies and Machar was forced to flee on foot. The ensuing war drew in new parts of the country and other local grievances and disputes came to the fore.
Despite intense international pressure
following the most recent peace deal in 2018, Kiir and Machar in the past year
pushed back two deadlines to take the crucial step of forming the coalition
government.
But with less than a week before the latest
deadline on Saturday, each made a key concession. Kiir announced a
"painful" decision on the politically sensitive issue of the number
of states, and Machar agreed to have the president take responsibility for his
security. On Thursday, they announced they had agreed to form a government
meant to lead to elections in three years - the first vote since independence.
Al Jazeera's Hiba Morgan, reporting from
Juba, said war-weary South Sudanese are expecting the government to resolve a
number of pressing challenges.
"The people on the streets are
looking to this government to solve the issue of the economy - South Sudan is
facing high inflation as a result of the years of conflict," Morgan said.
"There is also the issue of the
humanitarian crisis; more than half of the country's 12 million population are
in need of food aid to survive."
Kiir and Machar have said outstanding
issues will be negotiated under the new government.
Tens of thousands of rival forces still
must be knitted together into a single army, a process that the United Nations
and others have described as being behind schedule and poorly provisioned.
Observers have stressed that this new
government must be inclusive in a country where fighting has often occurred
along ethnic lines and where several armed groups operate. Not all have signed
on to the peace deal.
Other vice presidents named by Kiir on
Friday include Taban Deng Gai, a former ally of Machar who switched to the
government side and last month was sanctioned by the United States over involvement
in serious human rights abuses. Another is Rebecca Garang, the widow of John
Garang, who led a long fight for independence from Sudan.
No comments:
Post a Comment