South
Sudan President Salva Kiir arrives for a political rally in Juba, on March 18,
2015 ©Ashley Hamer (AFP)
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South
Sudan's parliament voted Tuesday to extend President Salva Kiir's mandate by
three years, an official said, formally ditching any plans for elections this
year in the civil war-torn country.
The
move has been seen as going against peace efforts by regional mediators, who
have been pushing President Kiir and rebel leader Riek Machar to share power in
a transitional government, although officials insist Kiir is seeking to avoid a
power vacuum following the collapse of peace talks.
GRAPHITTI NEWS based on AFP filing reports:
"The
tenure of the office of the president is extended by 36 months," said
parliament official Thomas Wani Kundu, adding that the government's proposal to
extend its mandate and award itself continued legitimacy "was passed
overwhelmingly".
Elections
in the bitterly divided nation had been due to be held before July 9 -- the end
of the parliament and president's mandate under a provisional constitution.
But
international donors and civil society groups have opposed any polls, arguing
that any vote held in the midst of civil war would be a sham. Instead they
pushed in vain for the two sides to strike a peace deal and put an end to a
worsening humanitarian crisis.
Talks
between Kiir and Machar in neighbouring Ethiopia collapsed earlier this month
after the two sides failed to agree on a proposal that would see the rebel
leader restored to the position of vice president. Both sides have since signalled
their intention to fight on.
The South Sudan
Legislative Assembly (SSLA)
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Rebels call for uprising -
Kundu,
however, said the extension of Kiir's mandate was designed to give the
government time to reach a peace deal.
"All
these amendments were initiated by the President in order to give peace a
chance. These (extra) three years are in order to give us a chance to get
prepared... so we can conduct free and fair elections," he insisted.
He
said Kiir would sign off Wednesday on the parliament's vote.
Fighting
broke out in December 2013 when Kiir -- from the Dinka tribe -- accused Machar,
an ethnic Nuer, of attempting a coup, setting off a cycle of retaliatory
killings across the country in which both the government and the rebels have
been accused of widespread atrocities.
Over
half the country's 12 million people need aid, according to the UN, which is
also sheltering some 100,000 civilians trapped inside camps ringed with barbed
wire, too terrified to venture out for fear of being killed because of their
ethnicity.
There
was no immediate reaction from Machar, although the rebels issued a statement
earlier Tuesday which branded Kiir's government as "too deformed to be
reformed" and calling on the country to "rise up" and overthrow
the government.
Kiir
and members of parliament were elected in April 2010, one year before the
country split from former civil war enemies in north Sudan. Elections have
never been held in South Sudan as an independent country.
Following the failure of
peace talks, the UN Security Council has threatened both sides with sanctions,
although none have yet been imposed.
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