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Sudan, South Sudan edge closer to war

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JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Sudan and South Sudan teetered dangerously on the edge of war Thursday after South Sudan refused to withdraw its troops from a disputed border area despite calls to do so by the United Nations and African Union.

Sudan, furious about South Sudan’s seizure a day earlier of its most important oil field in the town of Heglig, bombed a bridge outside the South Sudan oil town of Bentiu, killing one civilian and wounding four, officials said.

The fighting between the two nations was the worst since South Sudan seceded from the north in July after a January 2011 independence referendum. The deepening conflict threatens to dash peace talks to unravel the tangle of disputes between the two neighbors, which engaged in two decades of civil war ending in 2005.

With much of the region’s oil in South Sudan and the only pipeline to port routed through Sudan, the two countries have been at loggerheads over how to split the oil revenue, how much South Sudan should pay in oil transit fees and how the border should be drawn. Efforts to resolve the differences have all but collapsed since Sudan withdrew from the peace talks Wednesday.

Leaders of each side on Thursday accused the other of wanting war.

South Sudan President Salva Kiir told parliament that he would not withdraw forces from Heglig, saying that his country had been acting in self-defense after air and ground attacks from Sudan.

Kiir also threatened that South Sudanese forces would take control of the disputed area of Abyei, which is occupied by Sudan, and demanded that the U.N. pressure Sudan to abandon the region. He said he did not want to see South Sudan plunged back into meaningless war, but that the country should prepare for it if Sudan repudiated the peace talks.

“I always say we will not take the people of South Sudan back to war, but if we are being aggressed like this we will have to defend ourselves,” he said. “I am appealing to the citizens of the Republic of Sudan, especially the mothers, not to allow their children to be dragged into a meaningless war.”

Sudanese President Omar Hassan Ahmed Bashir said war was possible because of decisions made by South Sudan.

“Our brothers in South Sudan have chosen the path of war, implementing plans dictated by foreign parties who supported them during the civil war,” Bashir told reporters. “War is not in the interest of either South Sudan or Sudan but, unfortunately, our brothers in the South are thinking neither of the interests of Sudan or of South Sudan. “

Sudan vowed to mobilize its army to swiftly drive South Sudan’s forces back, raising the threat of a return to full-scale war.

The African Union and U.N. called on South Sudan to withdraw its troops. U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has called for a presidential summit to end hostilities.

Kiir told parliament that there had been several international appeals to him to command his forces to leave Heglig.

“Last night I never slept because of the telephone calls,” said Kiir, who described a call from Ban. “He gave me an order that ‘I’m ordering you to immediately withdraw from Heglig.’ I said, ‘I’m not under your command.’”

South Sudan’s invasion follows several cases of Sudanese war planes bombing South Sudanese oil wells in recent months, as well as bombings of border areas. Fighting between Sudan’s forces and rebels loyal to South Sudan has been raging along the border, with Sudan accusing its neighbor of arming and supporting the rebels.

Last week South Sudan claimed to have shot down a Sudanese fighter jet after two Sudanese war planes bombed South Sudan’s oil fields. Sudan denied that a plane was shot down.

Both sides have been talking of war for months, as peace talks have foundered and the key issues of oil revenue sharing and the border have remained unresolved.

In January, after Sudan commandeered several ships loaded with South Sudanese oil, South Sudan accused it of theft and abruptly turned off its oil production, which amounted to 350,000 barrels a day, equal to more than 95% of South Sudan’s budget revenue. Since then, relations have deteriorated sharply.

The U.S. State Department on Wednesday condemned South Sudan’s seizure of Heglig, which it said increased tension to a dangerous level. It also condemned Sudan’s bombings of South Sudan. Britain and the European Union issued similar condemnations.

In recent months, South Sudan has also accused Sudan of building two secret pipelines to siphon oil from transit pipelines. The first pipeline was discovered during the production shutdown in January. The second was found late last month as South Sudan’s forces pushed into the disputed border area.

robyn.dixon@latimes.com

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