South Sudan government ‘agrees to truce’

UN says more than 120,000 people displaced by violence in the region

A handout picture showing a South Korean  soldier helping a woman at a refugee camp in Bor, South Sudan, yesterday.   More than 1,000 people are believed to have died in the  violence in the region. Photograph: EPA
A handout picture showing a South Korean soldier helping a woman at a refugee camp in Bor, South Sudan, yesterday. More than 1,000 people are believed to have died in the violence in the region. Photograph: EPA

South Sudan’s government has agreed to end hostilities, regional African leaders said today.

In a statement they "welcomed the commitment by the Government of the Republic of South Sudan to an immediate cessation of hostilities".

The statement urged Riek Machar, the former deputy president who is accused of orchestrating a plot to overthrow president Salva Kiir, “to make similar commitments”.

The East African leaders under a bloc called IGAD were meeting in the Kenyan capital Nairobi.

READ SOME MORE

They said IGAD opposes a violent change of government in the world’s newest country and urges Mr Kiir and his rivals to start peace talks before the end of 2013.

Earlier. the United Nations said more than 120,000 people have been displaced by continuing violence in South Sudan, and about half are sheltering at UN compounds.

The number of internally displaced people has been rising since fighting started on December 15th in the capital Juba, before spreading across the oil-producing East African nation.

Aid agencies need at least $166 million (€120m) to save lives, according to the UN, which has urged South Sudan’s leaders to start talks.

Agencies