Addis Ababa (AFP) - East African
leaders met Thursday in Ethiopia to push warring South Sudanese rivals
to end almost 11 months of conflict, amid renewed threats of UN
sanctions.
South Sudanese
President Salva Kiir will later meet with rebel chief Riek Machar
alongside the regional leaders, a spokesman in Kiir's office, Ateny Wek
Ateny, told AFP.
It follows UN
Security Council warnings this week that there is "considerable
interest" in sanctions and an arms embargo, to stem violence in the
world's youngest nation that has left thousands killed and forced almost
two million from their homes.
Kenyan
President Uhuru Kenyatta, who is attending the summit along with
Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn and Ugandan President
Yoweri Museveni, said leaders would discuss how "remaining barriers to
the South Sudan peace process can be resolved."
The leaders are members of east Africa's IGAD bloc, which is mediating currently stalled talks.
War
broke out in December, when Kiir accused his sacked deputy Riek Machar
of trying to stage a coup, with the violence broadening into an ethnic
conflict, and now includes more than 20 different armed groups.
Kiir
and rebel chief Machar met last month in Tanzania, shaking hands and
accepting mutual responsibility for the war, which has been marked by
widespread human rights abuses and atrocities by both sides. There has
since been fierce fighting in several areas.
It was their first meeting since they signed a ceasefire in August, which, like three previous agreements, swiftly collapsed.
Regional nations including Ethiopia, Kenya and Uganda have had to cope with 467,000 refugees who have fled the war.
Uganda
has also sent in troops to back Kiir's forces, while Ethiopia and Kenya
have sent troops to bolster the UN peacekeeping mission.
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