Clinton offers stern advice in South Sudan, a country U.S. helped create

JUBA, South Sudan — Frustrated by a year of setbacks and violence and a looming refugee crisis in a country whose birth it midwifed last summer, the Obama administration sent its top diplomat to dispense some stern advice Friday.

Make lasting peace and an oil deal with Sudan, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton told South Sudan’s president, Salva Kiir, one day after a United Nations deadline for the countries to make progress toward resolving their bitter differences. Sanctions on both are possible if fighting continues.

Latest stories from Foreign

British air force jets divert Pakistani plane after alleged threat

British air force jets divert Pakistani plane after alleged threat

Two passengers are arrested after the Manchester-bound flight is escorted to a London airport.

Indian cricket tournament under threat amid latest scandal

Indian cricket tournament under threat amid latest scandal

FT.com | An enthusiastic police probe leaves the future of the glamorous Indian Premier League unclear.

Bombs, gunfire rock Afghan capital

Bombs, gunfire rock Afghan capital

Afghan police and insurgents wage a gun battle in a Kabul district that includes key government buildings.

Letting Putin down: Are Russians not living up to his expectations?

Letting Putin down: Are Russians not living up to his expectations?

In an early biography, he let slip a KGB view of the meaning of citizenship.

Before it falls through ice, Arctic research camp to close

Before it falls through ice, Arctic research camp to close

Russian drift station threatened by rapid melt in Arctic Sea.

“A percentage of something is better than a percentage of nothing,” Clinton said, reflecting the U.S. view that South Sudan is only hurting itself by turning off an oil flow on which both countries rely.

On Saturday, a key mediator said the countries had reached an oil deal, according to Reuters.

Backed by millions of dollars in U.S. and European aid, South Sudan is the world’s newest country and by some measures its least developed. It is locked in a deadly embrace with Sudan, its detested former overlord, that U.S. officials fear is becoming a war of attrition that the northern country is far better placed to win.

Disputes over oil and territory threaten to destroy a landmark 2005 peace deal that ended what was then Africa’s longest-running civil war. Sudan’s predominantly Christian and animist south seceded from the largely Arab north in July last year, but the arrangement left borders porous and details about oil production messy.

The two Sudans came to the brink of war in April. The fighting has contributed to the displacement of more than 200,000 people — one of the worst refugee crises in the world.

Just a day after Clinton’s visit, Thabo Mbeki, the former South African president and African Union mediator in Sudan, told reporters in Ethi­o­pia that an oil deal had finally been struck.

“It’s an (oil) agreement about all of the matters. The issues that were outstanding were charges for transportation, for processing, transit,” Mbeki said, according to Reuters. He gave no details but said Sudan and South Sudan would soon determine when to resume exports of southern oil through the north.

Clinton later issued a statement welcoming the agreement, saying it reflected “leadership and a new spirit of compromise on both sides.”

She praised the “courage” shown by South Sudan’s leaders, adding, “As I said in Juba yesterday, the interests of their people were at stake.” The Khartoum government, too, deserves credit, Clinton said. “If Sudan would now also take the steps to peace in Southern Kordofan, Blue Nile and Darfur, and if it will respect the rights of all citizens, it can likewise give its people a brighter future.”

The accord was a surprise; Sudan had previously insisted on an agreement covering border security before discussions on oil production and revenue sharing.

South Sudan shut off the oil pipelines in January in a dispute over payment. Most of the former united Sudan’s oil was produced in the landlocked south but shipped out from the north.

Loading...

Comments

Add your comment
 
Read what others are saying About Badges