Warring
South Sudanese factions gathered in Tanzania Wednesday in the latest peace
efforts to end over a year of civil war which has claimed the lives of tens of
thousands of people.
AFP reports that Rebel
chief Riek Machar is expected to meet later Wednesday with arch-rival President
Salva Kiir to ink the latest in a string of agreements, Tanzanian government
officials said.
The
two sides are expected to sign an agreement aimed at reunifying the ruling
party, the Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM), said Salvatory Rweyemamu,
from the office of Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete, who is hosting the
talks.
Ugandan
President Yoweri Museveni -- who has sent in troops to back Kiir's forces -- as
well as Kenya's Uhuru Kenyatta are also attending the talks, being held near
the northern Tanzanian tourist town of Arusha.
"We
are working towards the beginning of the conclusion of armed conflict,"
Ugandan government spokesman Ofwono Opondo said.
Fighting
broke out in South Sudan, the world's youngest nation, in December 2013 when
Kiir accused his sacked deputy Machar of attempting a coup.
Kiir
and Machar last met in November in Addis Ababa, where they agreed an immediate
halt to the war, a deal broken within hours.
The
fighting in the capital Juba set off a cycle of retaliatory massacres across
the country, pushing it to the brink of famine.
South
African Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa is also in Arusha to "bear
witness to the signing of a unity agreement between different sections of the
SPLM", his spokesman said.
The
talks in Tanzania are a parallel effort to stop-start peace negotiations
brokered by the east African regional bloc IGAD in the Ethiopian capital Addis
Ababa.
Another
round of IGAD talks are due on the sidelines of an African Union summit in
Addis Ababa at the end of January.
But
the war continues.
This
week, military spokesman Philip Aguer said the army and rebels had fought heavy
battles in the central Lakes state, and accused Machar's forces of blowing up
an oil well in Unity state.
"Machar's forces have
been spreading destruction... burning villages, destroying oil wells," he
said.
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