On independence day, South Sudan's Kiir pledges no more war; Pope says
will visit
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[July 09, 2021]
By Denis Dumo
JUBA (Reuters) - South Sudan President
Salva Kiir promised on Friday as the country marked its 10th anniversary
that he would not plunge it back into war, as Pope Francis said he would
visit if political leaders did more to maintain a fragile peace.
Violence exploded in South Sudan in late 2013, two years after it
seceded from Sudan, when Kiir, an ethnic Dinka, sacked vice president
Riek Machar, from the rival Nuer group.
The two men have since then signed many deals to end a war fuelled by
long-standing ethnic tensions and estimated to have killed more than
400,000 people, finally forming a government of national unity last
year.
Kiir dissolved parliament in May, paving the way for an expanded
legislature of 550 members, to include representatives from all ethnic
groupings under the terms of the most recent peace deal.
"I assure you that I will not return you back to war again," Kiir said
in a speech marking independence day. "Let us all work together to
recover the lost decade and put our country back to the path of
development in this new decade."
On Friday, Pope Francis told South Sudan's leaders they had to do much
more to establish peace and promised to visit the country, where
violence is still raging in some areas, according to United Nations
reports.
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South Sudan's President Salva Kiir attends a meeting on the cutting
of the number of states from 32 to 10, at the State House in Juba,
South Sudan February 15, 2020. REUTERS/Jok Solomun
"Sadly, your people continue to live in fear and
uncertainty," Francis said in their joint message with two other
Christian leaders, Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby and
Moderator of the Church of Scotland Jim Wallace.
"(They) lack confidence that their nation can indeed deliver the
'justice, liberty and prosperity' celebrated in your national
anthem," they said, adding that peace "may require personal
sacrifice from you".
Kiir, Machar and other politicians of predominantly Christian South
Sudan were hosted at a Vatican retreat in 2019, where, on the last
day, Francis knelt at their feet as he urged them not to return to
conflict.
(Reporting by Denis Dumo in Juba and Philip Pullella in Rome;
writing by Omar Mohammed; editing by John Stonestreet)
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