By Edith Lederer, UNITED
NATIONS New York
The “unprecedented” conflict between Sudan’s army and rival paramilitary force now in its seventh month is getting closer to South Sudan and the disputed Abyei region, the U.N. special envoy for the Horn of Africa warned Monday.
Hanna Serwaa Tetteh pointed to
the paramilitary Rapid Support Force’s recent seizures of the airport and oil
field in Belila, about 55 kilometers (34 miles) southwest of the capital of
Sudan’s West Kordofan State.
She told the U.N. Security
Council that the conflict “is profoundly affecting bilateral relations between
Sudan and South Sudan, with significant humanitarian, security, economic and
political consequences that are a matter of deep concern among the South
Sudanese political leadership.”
Sudan was plunged into chaos in mid-April when
simmering tensions between the military and the RSF exploded into open warfare
in the capital, Khartoum, and other areas across the East African nation.
More than 9,000 people have been killed, according to the
Armed Conflict Location & Event Data project, which tracks Sudan’s war. And
the fighting has driven over 4.5 million people to flee their homes to other
places inside Sudan and more than 1.2 million to seek refuge in neighboring countries,
the U.N. says.
Sudan
plunged into turmoil after its leading military figure, Gen. Abdel-Fattah
Burhan, led a coup in October 2021 that upended a short-run democratic
transition following three decades of autocratic rule by Omar al-Bashir. Since
mid-April, his troops have been fighting the RSF, commanded by Mohamed Hamdan
Dagalo.
Both sides have been taking
part in talks aimed at ending the conflict in the Saudi coastal city of Jeddah,
brokered by Saudi Arabia and the United States, since late October. But
fighting has continued.
The Security Council meeting
focused on the U.N. peacekeeping force in the oil-rich Abyei region, whose status was unresolved after
South Sudan became independent from Sudan in 2011. The region’s majority Ngok
Dinka people favor South Sudan, while the Misseriya nomads who come to Abyei to
find pasture for their cattle favor Sudan.
With the RSF’s seizures in
Belila, Tetteh said, the military confrontation between Sudan’s two sides “is
getting closer to the border with Abyei and South Sudan.”
“These military developments
are likely to have adverse consequences on Abyei’s social fabric and the
already fragile coexistence between the Misseriya and the Ngok Dinka,” she
said.
U.N. peacekeeping chief
Jean-Pierre Lacroix told the council that the outbreak of the Sudan conflict
“interrupted the encouraging signs of dialogue between the Sudan and South
Sudan witnessed earlier in 2023.” He said it had put on hold “the political process
with regard to the final status of Abyei and border issues.”
Tetteh echoed Lacroix, saying
that “there is no appetite from key Sudanese and South Sudanese leaders to
raise the status of Abyei.”
She said representatives of
the communities in Abyei are very aware of the conflict’s “adverse
consequences” on the resumption of talks on the region and expressed the need
to keep the Abyei dispute on the U.N. and African Union agendas.
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