Rebel clashes reignite fears for Sudan’s south

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JUBA – Renegade militia fighters clashed with south Sudan’s army for a second time in three weeks, both sides said, reigniting fears for the stability of the oil-producing region in the countdown to its independence. Rebel leader George Athor told Reuters just short of 100 people died in the latest fighting on Sunday in the south’s Jonglei state – where France’s Total oil giant is due to start exploring.
The south’s army said fighting continued on Monday but added Athor’s death count was exaggerated. The violence has cast a shadow over mass celebrations after southerners overwhelmingly voted to declare independence from the north in a referendum in January. The referendum was promised in a 2005 peace deal that ended decades of civil war with the north, a conflict that also saw fighting between rival southern militias.
Athor accused the southern Sudan People’s Liberation Army (SPLA) of starting last month’s fighting and breaking the terms of a ceasefire agreed in January.