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CAIRO (Reuters): The president of South Sudan and head of the country’s main rebel group signed a final cease fire and power-sharing agreement on Sunday and hailed a new longed-for era of peace in the country.
“I call on everyone as a leader of South Sudan that this agreement which we have signed today should be the end of the war and the conflict in our country,” said President Salva Kiir.
South Sudan’s former Vice President and rebel leader Riek Machar said after the signing: “Today we celebrate, not just in South Sudan, but throughout the world.”
South Sudan became independent from Sudan in 2011, but civil war broke out two years later between the Government led by Kiir and a rebel movement led by Machar.
Fuelled by personal and ethnic rivalries, the conflict has killed tens of thousands, displaced an estimated quarter of South Sudan’s population of 12 million and ruined its economy that heavily relies on crude oil production.“An agreement on outstanding issues has been signed and this agreement expresses the commitment of all parties to a ceasefire,” the Foreign Minister of neighbouring Sudan Al-Dirdiri Mohamed said on Sudan State television.
Sudan helped broker the agreement.
Sudan’s president Omar al-Bashir said on Sunday that oil would be pumped from South Sudan’s Wahda region to Sudan beginning 1 September.
“There will be profit, brother Salva. One of our goals is the need to save the economy of South Sudan because it has reached a level of collapse,” he said on Sudan State TV.
Previous peace agreements held for only a matter of months before fighting resumed, which Kiir has blamed on foreign influence.
“My Government and I know the conflict in South Sudan has resulted in a financial and political burden,” Kiir said.