Sudan’s President Omar al-Bashir arrived in South Sudan Friday for the first time since his 2011 visit for the country’s independence celebrations
Sudan President Omar Bashir.
South Sudanese President Salva Kiir, Bashir’s former civil war foe and an ex-rebel commander, welcomed his counterpart at Juba airport.
A military band played the national anthems of the two countries as
the two heads of state greeted South Sudanese ministers assembled to
welcome Bashir.
Bashir’s visit “will be good for the future of the two countries,” South Sudanese Information minister Barnaba Marial Benjamin said before Bashir’s plane touched down.
“There should be peace between the two countries,” he said.
The two nations battled on their un-demarcated border one year ago,
with Khartoum’s warplanes bombing the South, and Juba sending troops
deep into disputed areas to battle Sudanese soldiers.
The fighting raised fears of wider war with intermittent clashes continuing for several months, but international pressure reined both sides into an uneasy standoff.
But at talks in Addis Ababa in March, Sudan and South Sudan
finally settled on detailed timetables to improve relations by resuming
the oil flows and implementing eight other key pacts including one for a
demilitarised border buffer zone.
Security was tight in Juba with the streets of the southern capital
lined with security forces who had started deploying on Thursday night.
The only vehicles on the road were official convoys and the few
pedestrians moving around were subject to constant security checks.
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