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Clinton spoke after a meeting with South Sudan President Salva Kiir. The mostly black African tribes of South Sudan and the mainly Arab north battled two civil wars over more than five decades, and some 2 million died in the latest war, from 1983-2005. It ended with the 2005 peace pact that led to last year's independence declaration for South Sudan. Though the breakup was peaceful, hostilities flared earlier this year. South Sudan inherited about three-quarters of the region's oil, but shut down its oil industry in January after accusing Sudan of stealing oil that the South must pump through Sudan's pipelines. That decision has cost both governments dearly in lost revenue. In April, the two countries' militaries fought over the disputed, oil-rich region of Heglig. South Sudan troops took over the town from Sudanese forces, but that offensive maneuver was condemned by world leaders. South Sudan says it then retreated from Heglig, though Sudan says its forces pushed the South out. Also on Friday, China's state media criticized Clinton for comments she made earlier in the week in Senegal criticizing China's investments in Africa. "Whether Clinton was ignorant of the facts on the ground or chose to disregard them, her implication that China has been extracting Africa's wealth for itself is utterly wide of the truth," the official Xinhua New Agency said. Beijing has been criticized for ignoring human rights concerns, local laws and environmental regulations as it boosts investment in search of energy and resources to fueld its growing economy.
[Associated
Press;
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