Washington, DC, January 7, 2014 (SSNA) -- The United States has urged the South Sudanese President Salva kiir Mayardiit to release all detained SPLM senior members.
Kiir
accuses the imprisoned officials of an “attempted coup”, a claim widely
interpreted in South Sudan as an ‘inside job’ intended to eliminate
anyone who defies Kiir’s leadership.
“We do believe that to be meaningful and productive, senior SPLM members currently detained in Juba need to be present for discussions on political issues which are happening in Addis,” State Department deputy spokeswoman Marie Harf said.
“We do believe that to be meaningful and productive, senior SPLM members currently detained in Juba need to be present for discussions on political issues which are happening in Addis,” State Department deputy spokeswoman Marie Harf said.
“To
help move these talks forward, we urge the government of South Sudan to
uphold its commitments and release political detainees immediately”,
she added.
The
U.S. sees the apprehended SPLM leaders as “political detainees” not
“coup plotters” and wants them to be part of peace talks in Ethiopia. In
another development, the European Union (EU) has on Tuesday joined the U.S. and urged Kiir to let go all SPLM officials who are in custody.
Last month, United
States Called for “immediate mediated political talks” in South Sudan
and urged the warring factions to come to a negotiating table.
Meanwhile,
South Sudanese Information Minister Michael Makuei Lueth said releasing
the arrested officials will send a bad signal.
“There is no way we can be asked to release people who are arrested and charged”, Michael Makuei told reporters.
“Freeing the detainees would set a bad precedent”, he asserted.
Political
differences between senior officials of the ruling Sudan People’s
Liberation Movement (SPLM) party went unresolved in the December 14
meeting of the National Liberation Council (NLC).
In
that meeting, the senior leaders of the SPLM who do not agree with
Kiir's leadership pulled out of the meeting, labeled the process as
"undemocratic", and accused the party Chairman (Kiir) of “dictatorial
tendencies”.
Fighting
erupted on the 15th of December 2013, in Juba when one unit of the
presidential guards was being suspected of an incursion by another
group.
The
next day (December 16), President Kiir, dressed in full military
uniform, declared in a news conference that his political rivals
attempted a “coup” and that the plan has been crashed.
At
least 1,000 people have been killed and many more are still missing.
The United Nations (UN) estimated that more than 200,000 people have
been displaced.
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