Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

S. Sudanese near unity government

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JUBA, South Sudan — South Sudan’s rival leaders on Saturday appeared to clear a major hurdle with just a week left before the deadline to form a coalition government, with the president announcing a “painful” compromise on the politicall­y sensitive number of states.

President Salva Kiir said that after meeting with rival Riek Machar on Friday he had resolved to return the world’s youngest nation to 10 states plus three administra­tive areas, easing a “sticky issue” as the country moves on from civil war.

The agreement will help move the country beyond “this imposed senseless conflict,” the president said, calling the compromise “one of the most painful decisions I have ever made.”

Internatio­nal pressure by the United States and others had been building on Kiir and Machar to meet the Feb. 22 deadline to again join forces in a transition­al government. The deadline has been extended twice in the past year. Machar will return as Kiir’s deputy, a role that has twice slid into conflict.

The U.S., South Sudan’s top source of humanitari­an aid, even took the dramatic step in recent weeks of imposing sanctions on Kiir’s first vice president, Taban Deng Gai.

There was no immediate comment Saturday from Machar’s camp on the president’s announceme­nt.

Difficult issues remain, notably security arrangemen­ts that include the merging of thousands of former warring forces into a national military. That process has seen multiple delays.

South Sudan’s five-year civil war, which erupted just two years after independen­ce from Sudan, killed nearly 400,000 people and displaced millions. The economy was shattered, and nearly half the country remains in a severe hunger crisis.

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