Civilians walking inside the UNMISS compound in Bor, on December 18, 2013, following the fierce fighting that has killed hundreds of people and sent thousands fleeing to UN bases. South Sudan rebels battling government forces rejected peace efforts on December 19, 2013 as the region scrambled to prevent the world's youngest state from collapsing only two years after its birth.
JUBA
South Sudan rebels
battling government forces rejected peace efforts on Thursday as the
region scrambled to prevent the world's youngest state from collapsing
only two years after its birth.
Troops loyal to
fugitive former vice president Riek Machar seized the town of Bor late
Wednesday, army spokesman Philip Aguer said, as fighting continued in
eastern Jonglei state.
President Salva Kiir has blamed
the bloodshed on a coup bid by his perennial rival Machar, who says the
alleged overthrow was a fabrication to cover up a regime purge.
Kiir has said he was ready to "sit down" but Machar, who was sacked by the president in July, rejected the offer.
In
an interview with RFI radio on Thursday, Machar said he had appealed to
the ruling party and army "to remove Salva Kiir from the leadership of
the country."
Some 450 people had been killed in the
capital Juba since battles broke out on Sunday, including around 100
soldiers, Aguer said.
AFP reporters said the city was calm on Thursday.
Human
Rights Watch said witnesses had reported horrific cases of both
soldiers and rebels executing people based on their ethnicity, warning
it could lead to "revenge attacks and more violence."
The battles have raised concerns of ethnic conflict, with Kiir coming from the majority Dinka people and Machar from the Nuer.
Soldiers
in Juba "asked individuals about their ethnicity before killing or
releasing them", or identified them from traditional facial scarring,
HRW said.
However, the government insists the clashes
are over power and politics, noting that both sides include leaders from
different tribes.
"We condemn in strongest possible
terms attempts to depict (the) coup as ethnic strife," a government
statement Thursday read, noting that of the 11 key figures arrested
since fighting began -- many former powerful minsters -- only two were
Nuer.
'On the cusp of a civil war'
The
United Nations peacekeeping mission said it was sheltering civilians in
six state capitals, including Juba and Bor, as well as in Bentiu, the
main town of the crucial petroleum-producing state of Unity.
At least five oil workers were killed in Unity when attackers stormed their compound late on Wednesday, a company official said.
Oil production forms over 95 percent of South Sudan's fledgling economy.
Foreigners
were being evacuated from the troubled country, with the United States
and Britain sending in flights for their citizens, and others fleeing
overland south to Uganda.
Long lines of aid workers and
expatriates began crowding Juba's airport on Wednesday waiting to board
the first flight they could out of the country, with delays after an
aircraft that crash landed -- with no casualties -- blocked the runway
for several hours.
UN chief Ban Ki-moon has warned fighting could spread.
"There
is a risk of this violence spreading to other states, and we have
already seen some signs of this," Ban said, adding the crisis "urgently
needs to be dealt with through political dialogue."
There were fears that the poor and unstable nation, which broke free from Sudan in 2011, could slide back into all-out conflict.
"The
scenario many feared but dared not contemplate looks frighteningly
possible: South Sudan, the world's newest state, is now arguably on the
cusp of a civil war," the International Crisis Group (ICG) think tank
warned.
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