The Phnom Penh Post

S Sudan rebel leader Machar sworn in as vice-president

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SOUTH Suda n rebel leader R iek Machar was sworn in as first v icepreside­nt on Sat u rday, for ma l ly rejoining the government in the latest bid to br ing peace to a nat ion ravaged by war.

President Salva Kiir hailed the “official ending of war” and said peace was now “irreversib­le” as the new unity government was formed after more than a year of delays and bickering over crucial issues.

It is the third time that bitter foes Machar and Kiir will attempt to rule together and the pair has many difference­s yet to iron out as they form a government that is a cornerston­e of a September 2018 peace deal.

“For the people of South Sudan, I want to assure you that we will work together to end your suffering,” Machar said after taking the oath and embracing Kiir.

The rebel leader ret urns as f i rst v ice-president in a t ra nsit ion gover nment which wi l l ser ve for 36 months.

Four other vice-presidents from the current regime and other opposition groups will also form part of a bloated government of 35 ministers, in addition to 550 lawmakers.

The rivals started out similarly as president and deputy at independen­ce in 2011 but Kiir sacked Machar in 2013 and later accused him of attempting a coup against him, sparking a war characteri­sed by ethnic bloodshed between Kiir’s Dinka and Machar’s Nuer communitie­s.

“We must forgive one another and reconcile. I also appeal to the people of Dinka and Nuer to forgive one another,” said Kiir.

A 2015 peace deal brought Machar back as vice-president and he returned to Juba amid heavy security.

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.

After six years of war, some 380,000 people have died, and four million fled their homes, half of them into neighbouri­ng countries in Africa’s worst refugee crisis. More than half the population is facing severe hunger.

The deal was welcomed by rights g roups, t he EU a nd UN ref ugee chief, who a ll highlighte­d t he long and dif f icult road ahead.

“There are major challenges ahead. In particular, the transition­al security arrangemen­ts are still at an early stage and need re-orienting,” an EU statement said.

UN High Commission­er for Refugees Filippo Grandi said: “Millions of South Sudanese – including refugees and internally displaced people, deserve to see an end to their miseries”.

Human Rights Watch Africa director Jehanne Henry urged the new government to “quickly set out a human rights agenda that includes reforming the abusive national security service, freeing abducted civilians held by armed groups, and establishi­ng a hybrid war crimes court in partnershi­p with the African Union”.

The economy of the oil-rich nation is shattered, infrastruc­ture and roads barely exist, and millions of children are out of school.

The September peace deal has led to the longest period of relative calm since 2013 but fighting continues between government and holdout rebel groups in the Central Equatoria region.

Bloody localised conflicts between communitie­s in the absence of a functionin­g state have also soared.

And, with around 190,000 people still cowering in UN protection camps around the country, the UN special envoy to South Sudan David Shearer said he believed that “we will see lots of people once displaced moving back to their homes”.

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