Uganda ready withdraw its
troops from South Sudan
March
16, 2014 (KAMPALA) – Uganda is ready to withdraw its troops from neighbouring
South Sudan once the Inter-governmental Authority on Development (IGAD) deploys
the proposed regional stabilisation force in the troubled nation, its chief of
defense forces said.
Gen.
Katumba Wamala, however, said the move will depend on how soon the Protection
and Deterrent Force (PDF), which will comprise of forces from the IGAD member
countries, comes into effect.
"The
time frame will depend on how soon the forces which have been tasked land on
the ground. I can’t put on dates, weeks. It will depend on how fast we get
those troops on the ground,” the army reportedly said.
"What
we shouldn’t do and will be regrettable, if we created a vacuum. If we leave
without the boots on the ground, it will create a vacuum, that vacuum is very
unwelcome," he added.
Uganda
deployed a contingent of its army in South Sudan days after violence broke out
in the capital, Juba between members of the presidential guard. The conflict
later spread to other parts of the country, with three of its 10 states badly
affected.
But
East African regional heads of states meeting in the Ethiopian capital, Addis
Ababa last week authorised the prompt deployment of a Protection and Deterrent
Force (PDF) from the region to help restore peace and stability in South Sudan.
The
proposed force, according to a communiqué issued during IGAD’s 25th
extraordinary session, would operate with a clear mandate and operational
guidelines as part of the IGAD Monitoring and Verification Mechanism in the new
nation.
The
summit, however, called upon the United Nations Security Council and the
African Union to provide all the necessary support, calling on the parties to
ensure the progressive withdrawal of all armed groups and all allied forces
invited by either side from the theatre of operations as per the ceasefire
agreement, in accordance with its 31 January communiqué.
UNCONDITIONAL ACCEPTANCE
Meanwhile,
South Sudan has unconditionally accepted deployment of the regional force,
despite protest and rejection by the rebel group which has been fighting government
for almost three months since a split in ruling party (SPLM) and army (SPLA)
plunged the young nation into the mid-December conflict.
"The
summit had agreed to do two important things. One is the emphasis on the
commitment of the parties to the resolve the conflict through peaceful
dialogue, which the government of the republic of South Sudan had already
accepted as a principle and formed negotiating team," said Nhial Deng
Nhial, South Sudan’s lead negotiator at the Addis Ababa talks.
"We
don’t think anyone can object to the regional initiative," he added.
The
leader of the SPLM/A-in-Opposition, Riek Machar on Friday condemned the
proposed deployments of such forces, warning that it will widen and regionalise
the current conflict.
"We
reject it and condemn it in the strongest terms. It is an attempt to
regionalize the internal conflict," Machar told Sudan Tribune by
phone from one of his bases in the oil-producing Upper Nile state.
The
rebel leader described IGAD’s decision as "unfortunate" as it interfered
in the "internal conflict" between factions of South Sudan’s ruling
party and the army.
The
rebels had already objected to Uganda’s decision to deploy troops in South
Sudan to fight alongside the latter’s army (SPLA) against Machar’s rebels; a
loose coalition of armed civilians mobilised mainly on the basis of ethnic
affiliations and defectors from the army.
Despite
beginning as an internal political argument between rival factions within the
ruling SPLM, which was not divided along tribal lines, the conflict has killed
around 10,000 people many of whom were targeted because of their ethnic
identity.
Last
month, the United States called for the withdrawal of all foreign troops
involved in the South Sudanese conflict, saying their presence contravenes provisions
of a ceasefire agreement its warring parties signed in Addis Ababa on 13
January.
Sudan,
Kenya and Ethiopia had previously opposed to the presence of Ugandan troops in
the new nation with the latter saying their presence threatens regional peace and
stability.
(ST).
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