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  • 2
    Dec
    2012
    1:24pm, EST

    Building South Sudan from scratch: Why some new countries are more equal than others

    By David R Arnott, NBC News

    What makes a nation, other than its people? Is it the flag, the passport, the currency, the anthem? Or is it something more complex and harder to pin down?

    In seeking to illustrate the latest in a series of Reuters special reports on the growing pains of South Sudan, photographer Adriane Ohanesian gathered a selection of objects. 

    Adriane Ohanesian / Reuters

    Photo illustrations, clockwise from top left: A South Sudanese passport; A South Sudanese five pound note; A motorcycle license plate from the new nation's Eastern Equatoria State; A copy of South Sudan's national anthem handwritten by Gabriel Arnest, one of its three composers.

    Adriane Ohanesian / Reuters

    Photo illustrations, clockwise from top left: The South Sudan national soccer team's jersey; A bottle of White Bull beer, produced in Juba; A tote bag with the slogan 'I heart Juba'; A car air freshener showing the seal of South Sudan.

    Reuters reports — Not all new countries are really new. Some are born almost fully formed; others have to start from nothing.

    Adriane Ohanesian / Reuters

    The flag of South Sudan.

    That difference is crucial to a new nation's chances of success.

    More than half the youngest nations in the world were born or reborn after the collapse of communism in Europe and had existed as independent states as far back as the Middle Ages. Most regained independence with established institutions — courts, banks, police forces, schools — and skilled people to run them.

    Interactive: Key measures on the world's newest countries

    South Sudan, which gained full independence last year, is at the other end of the spectrum. When it won a measure of autonomy from Sudan in 2005, its roster of organized, national institutions began and ended with its army.

    "In the case of South Sudan, you don't reconstruct, you don't rebuild, you start from scratch," Hilde Johnson, the U.N. Secretary General's Special representative for South Sudan, told Reuters. Read the full story.

    Related content: 

    • Blood and oil tinge South Sudan's first birthday
    • 120 doctors for 8 million people: South Sudan's health-care gap
    • Slideshow: South Sudan declares independence
    • More images from South Sudan on PhotoBlog

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

     

    12 comments

    Supposed to be the oldest Continent on earth with the people being the oldest. Go figure they are centuries behind the rest of the world, and are the most violent. Such discoveries that have been such a benefit to mankind that has come from there. I say leave them alone and keep them in the area the …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: africa, world-news, featured, south-sudan
  • 21
    Nov
    2012
    6:42pm, EST

    Overcrowded South Sudan prisons lack basic health care, sanitation and nutrition

    Dai Kurokawa / EPA

    An inmate sits in his cell in Rumbek Central Prison in Rumbek, South Sudan, Oct. 25, 2012.

    Dai Kurokawa / EPA

    A female inmate looks out the prison door at Juba Central Prison in Juba, South Sudan, Oct. 23.

    European Pressphoto Agency reports — Built in 1948 by the British colonial government, Rumbek Central Prison houses some 600 prisoners who live in overcrowded cells with virtually no access to basic health care, sanitation, as well as adequate food and nutrition.

    Arbitrary detention is rife in South Sudan, says a 2012 report by Human Rights Watch. Several inmates interviewed, some of them on death row, said they had no access to lawyers or any form of legal aid. But it is merely just one of several human rights laws being broken at the prisons in South Sudan. Conditions in the country's prisons 'clearly do not comply with international or domestic law and standards on prisoners' welfare', the report continues. Those who are accused of or convicted of murder are often shackled for extended periods of time, if not permanently. And corporal punishment is often used to 'discipline' inmates such as being beaten with a stick or whip for fighting or disobeying prison officers.

    Smile Tombek, 33, an inmate in Juba Central Prison, says he was sentenced to 14 years in jail without a trial along with his three sisters, for killing a man, but no one told them who is accused of the killing. 'Someone was murdered and our whole family was accused so we were arrested, and then taken directly to this prison from the police station. Since then, I have never had a chance to talk to anyone, like a lawyer'.

    The prison director at the Rumbek Central Prison says that he acknowledges the poor conditions at his prison but there have been some improvements over the past year, although the government needs more funding. South Sudan's economy has been seriously damaged following the halting of its oil production after a border dispute with its northern neighbor Sudan. The world's newest nation still has a lot of work to do for its citizens - whether they are guilty of a crime or not.

    EDITOR’S NOTE: Text and images made available to NBC News on Nov. 21

    Dai Kurokawa / EPA

    Shackled inmates sit in the yard in Rumbek Central Prison in Rumbek, South Sudan, Oct. 24.

    Dai Kurokawa / EPA

    Inmates line up bowls of food for dinner in Rumbek Central Prison in Rumbek, South Sudan, Oct. 25.

    Dai Kurokawa / EPA

    An elderly inmate leans against a cross at a yard inside the Rumbek Central Prison in Rumbek, South Sudan, Oct. 25.

    Dai Kurokawa / EPA

    Shackled inmates wash their hands and feet at a yard in Rumbek Central Prison in Rumbek, South Sudan, Oct. 24.

    Dai Kurokawa / EPA

    Shackled inmates play cards in Rumbek Central Prison in Rumbek, South Sudan, Oct. 25.

    Dai Kurokawa / EPA

    A female inmate, said to be mentally ill, lies down in her cell, soiled with her own urine and feces, in Juba Central Prison in Juba, South Sudan, Oct. 23.

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    5 comments

    So what else is new?Countries like this don't even take care of their law abiding citizens much less criminals.

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    Explore related topics: human-rights, africa, prison, world-news, south-sudan
  • 9
    Nov
    2012
    11:03am, EST

    South Sudan catches gold fever

    Adriane Ohanesian / Reuters

    A Toposa boy walks along the Singaita River where gold has been found in Namorinyang, South Sudan.

    Adriane Ohanesian / Reuters

    A Toposa woman looks for gold in the Singaita River in Namorinyang, South Sudan.

    Adriane Ohanesian / Reuters

    A man digs a hole in search of gold in Napotpot, South Sudan.

    Adriane Ohanesian / Reuters

    A Toposa boy takes a rest after digging for gold in Napotpot, South Sudan.

    Adriane Ohanesian / Reuters

    A trader weighs his gold in a shop in Kapoeta, South Sudan.

    Adriane Ohanesian / Reuters

    A Toposa girl pans for gold in the Singaita River in Namorinyang, South Sudan.

    Adriane Ohanesian / Reuters

    Jackson Locheto from Kenya uses a gold detector in Nanakanak, South Sudan.

    In South Sudan ordinary people have been extracting gold from artisanal mines and taking part in as-yet unregulated trade in the precious metal.

    Reuters reports, dozens of Toposa tribesmen and women, festooned with plastic necklaces, brass piercings and beaded amulets, hack away at the red soil with metal poles and shovels, digging small craters in a boozy revelry.

    "Everything is luck," said Leer Likuam on the edge of a shallow trench through a translator. On an average day he might dig up six grams, worth around 1,200 South Sudanese pounds ($270), he said. "Some days you're lucky."

    Once he found a 200-gram gold nugget bigger than his thumb, boasts Likuam.

    On the international market, Likuam's prize lump would fetch $11,000, an enormous sum in a country where the average teacher earns just 360 South Sudanese pounds, about $90, per month.

    But now the government hopes to pass mining legislation that will formalize the industry, let them tax precious metal and mineral exports and sell concessions to large-scale investors. Read the complete article.

    All images were captured by Reuters photographer Adriane Ohanesian in September and October 2012, but made available to NBC News today.

    Adriane Ohanesian / Reuters

    A shirt hangs in the window of a Sarko alcohol shop in Kapoeta, South Sudan.

    Adriane Ohanesian / Reuters

    A bowl holding small flakes of gold sits in the middle of Singaita River in Namorinyang, South Sudan.

    Adriane Ohanesian / Reuters

    A view of the Singaita River which flows down from the Lauro mountains and through Kapoeta, South Sudan.

    • Follow @NBCNewsPictures on Twitter

    6 comments

    the governent will take over the river and give the corporations the profits. The poor will once again be pushed aside.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: business, gold, africa, work, mining, world-news, featured, south-sudan, natural-resouces
  • 1
    Nov
    2012
    11:17am, EDT

    South Sudan prisons in tatters after decades of war

    Tony Karumba / AFP - Getty Images

    A female inmate peers out through the grills of a metallic prison gate at Juba's central prison in South Sudan.

    Tony Karumba / AFP - Getty Images

    An inmate standd astride an open waste water gulley with shackles around his ankles at the prison yard of Rumbek's central prison in South Sudan.

    Tony Karumba / AFP - Getty Images

    Prison wardens carry out an inspection of the kitchens at Juba's central prison in South Sudan.

    GRAPHIC WARNING: Contains images which some viewers may find disturbing.

    In Juba, the ramshackle capital of South Sudan, the world's newest nation, over 100 people await execution in filthy and crowded prisons. Human rights activists say conditions break basic freedoms, with many inmates never having even seen a lawyer, or even knowing their charges.

    In June, Human Rights Watch issued a report that found that prisoners in South Sudan were often detained arbitrarily, often not charged with crimes and frequently not provided with lawyers for their defense. The report said some prisoners were detained for up to five years without trial. Continue reading AP article.

    Impoverished South Sudan was left in ruins after decades of war with Sudan before separating in 2011 after a landslide independence referendum. But like so much in the country, the legal system was left in tatters, with sometimes conflicting, overlapping systems of justice.

    All images captured Oct. 23-26 by AFP - Getty Images photographer Tony Karumba, but made available to NBC News today. 

    Tony Karumba / AFP - Getty Images

    Inmates get ready to dish out food to other prisoners for their evening meal at Rumbek's central prison in South Sudan

    Tony Karumba / AFP - Getty Images

    Inmates, who are shackled together at the ankles, bathe at a water point at Rumbek's central prison in South Sudan.

    - / AFP - Getty Images

    A mentally ill inmate at Juba's central prison in South Sudan is locked-up in solitary confinement.

    • Read UN's program for South Sudan
    • Follow @NBCNewsPictures on Twitter

    2 comments

    "Impoverished South Sudan was left in ruins after decades of war with Sudan before separating in 2011 after a landslide independence referendum." Fate of S. Sudan is common when Muslims indulge in genocides of non-Muslims and a separate nation if formed. If Muslims form more than forty percent in a  …

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    Explore related topics: human-rights, africa, prison, crime, world-news, juba, south-sudan
  • 4
    Aug
    2012
    11:44am, EDT

    South Sudan strikes deal with Sudan to export oil through pipelines

    By NBC News and wire services

    Jenny Vaughan / AFP - Getty Images

    African Union lead mediator Thabo Mbeki speaks in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, on Saturday to announce that Sudan and South Sudan have reached an agreement on how to share the oil riches controlled by Khartoum.

    Landlocked South Sudan said it has a struck a deal with Sudan over oil exports through Sudan's pipelines, but the agreement won't go into effect until border issues are resolved, Khartoum officials said.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    In a statement Saturday, South Sudan's government said that it will pay approximately $9.48 a barrel to transport its fuel through Sudan's pipelines.

    The White House praised the deal and encouraged agreement on humanitarian issues as well.


    South Sudan says the agreement on pipeline transportation fees will last for three and a half years, after which the countries may negotiate lower rates or South Sudan, which expects to have constructed a pipeline through Kenya, will stop using Sudan's pipeline.

    A row over the sharing of the two countries' once-unified oil industry prompted South Sudan to shut down its 350,000-thousand-barrel-a-day oil production. Oil also sparked a dangerous military confrontation between the two sides in April, when South Sudan captured the disputed town of Heglig, which is responsible for more than half of Sudan's oil production.

    The U.N. Security Council had given the African neighbors until Thursday to resolve all conflicts left over from South Sudan's secession a year ago under a 2005 peace agreement.

    Watch World News videos on NBCNews.com

    U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who on Friday urged the two nations to resolve bitter disputes that earlier this year pushed the countries to the brink of war, welcomed announcement of the oil pact.

    “This agreement reflects leadership and a new spirit of compromise on both sides,” she said in a prepared statement obtained by NBC News.

    “As I said in Juba yesterday, the interests of their people were at stake. … The future of South Sudan is now brighter.”

    "For Sudan, too, this agreement offers a way out of the extreme economic stress it is now experiencing,” Clinton said. “If Sudan would now also take the steps to peace in Southern Kordofan, Blue Nile and Darfur, and if it will respect the rights of all citizens, it can likewise give its people a brighter future.”

    Stay informed with the latest headlines; sign up for our newsletter 

    Clinton is on an 11-day tour of Africa.

    President Barack Obama, in a White House statement obtained by NBC News, said, "The leaders of Sudan and South Sudan deserve congratulations for reaching agreement and finding compromise on such an important issue, and I applaud the efforts of the international community which came together to encourage and support the parties in finding a resolution. ... I am also encouraged by the announcement of a possible agreement on humanitarian access to Southern Kordofan and Blue Nile, and urge the immediate implementation of this agreement to provide urgently needed humanitarian assistance to people in these areas."

    The oil deal was announced in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, where African Union mediator Thabo Mbeki said, "It's an (oil) agreement about all of the matters. The issues that were outstanding were charges for transportation, for processing, transit," Mbeki, the former South African president, told reporters.

    "What will remain (now)...is to then discuss the steps as to when the oil companies should be asked to prepare for the resumption of production and export," Mbeki said.

    He gave no time frame, saying only the parties had until Sept. 22 to resolve border security and other conflicts.

    The two sides, deeply mistrustful of each other, have often not implemented previous agreements and still need to mark their 1,200-mile border and resolve charges both have made of supporting rebels in the other’s territory.

    This article includes reporting by Reuters and The Associated Press.

    More world stories from NBC News:

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    10 comments

    For decades the conflicts within Sudan are about oil in the southern Sudan region. As hundreds of billions of barrel of oil have been discovered in the shallow oil fields of southern Sudan, the money hungry Arabs are drawn to southern Sudan as if it were a second Mecca.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: oil, pipeline, sudan, africa, hillary-clinton, south-sudan
  • 9
    Jul
    2012
    9:56am, EDT

    'We have waited for the flower of freedom': Blood and oil tinge South Sudan's first birthday

    Shannon Jensen / AP

    A man holds South Sudanese flags as he prepares to dance at the country's anniversary celebrations at the John Garang mausoleum in Juba on July 9, 2012.

    Adriane Ohanesian / Reuters

    Boys wash a tractor in the Pibor river in Pibor on June 24, 2012. All pictures made available to msnbc.com on July 9, 2012.

    Adriane Ohanesian / Reuters

    Children sing and dance on a Sunday morning at the Presbyterian Church of South Sudan in Pibor on June 24, 2012.

    Reuters reports — South Sudanese celebrating their nation's first birthday on Monday will bask in the pride of their hard-won political freedom, but many may ask when they will enjoy the material benefits promised by the government of former rebels. 

    Paula Bronstein / Getty Images

    South Sudan's first president, Salva Kiir, stands after placing flowers at the mausoleum for Dr. John Garang during a ceremony celebrating the first anniversary of South Sudan's independence day on July 9, 2012 in Juba.

    'Free at last': South Sudan is world's newest nation

    South Sudan split from Sudan after a civil war that killed some 2 million people over two decades, becoming the world's newest nation. But the jubilation that saturated the ramshackle capital last year has dimmed.

    Slideshow: South Sudan declares independence

    "We have waited for the flower of freedom," student Pater Achuil said as he sat in an unfinished building near Juba airport, shards of concrete poking through the capital's skyline behind him. Read the full story.

    More images from South Sudan on PhotoBlog

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    Adriane Ohanesian / Reuters

    A boy sets up his shop at a market in Pibor on June 23, 2012.

    Adriane Ohanesian / Reuters

    A boy works in the corner of a classroom at Pibor Primary School in Pibor on June 25, 2012.

    Adriane Ohanesian / Reuters

    Cows are seen tied behind a house at sunset in Pibor on June 21, 2012.

     

    7 comments

    we should look around us ,to be thankful of what we have

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    Explore related topics: africa, world-news, independence, south-sudan
  • 6
    Jul
    2012
    7:12am, EDT

    Sudanese refugees face growing health crisis

    Paula Bronstein / Getty Images

    A Sudanese family rests along a road they have been walking for the past three days, on July 6, 2012 along the border road inside South Sudan. Many refugees have been walking for 4 to 5 days from inside Sudan to get to Yida refugee camp from the Nuba mountain region where they have no food and are fleeing the on-going conflict.

    Paula Bronstein / Getty Images

    People wait in line for hours to receive medical treatment at the CARE medical clinic at the Yida refugee camp on July 5, 2012 in Yida, South Sudan.

    Paula Bronstein / Getty Images

    A Sudanese woman sits outside her hut on a rainy afternoon at the Yida refugee camp on July 5, 2012.

    Paula Bronstein / Getty Images

    Bolis Jamal, 3, stands near his temporary shelter suffering from malnutrition at the Yida refugee camp on July 1, 2012.

    Refugees in South Sudan are facing a nutrition and disease crisis as conflict and hunger in the neighboring Blue Nile State of Sudan continue to drive people across the border.

    See more of Paula Bronstein's images of the Yida refugee camp, which has a swelling population of over 60,000 people.

    Jonathan Miller has spent the last week in Jamam, another camp nearby, and reports below on the looming health disaster which many blame on the United Nations' failure to act sooner. 

    Channel 4 News: Sudanese refugees tell of their flight from persecution

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    The violence that has followed last year's division of Sudan has spawned a refugee crisis that aid workers say is the worst they have ever seen. Jonathan Miller of the UK's Channel Four News reports.

    10 comments

    Al Sharpton and Jessie Jackson Are far to comfortable where thay are to get involved, and this is one more reason to blame it on the honk -y , and say thay dont care. Thay would prefer to instagate ritious behaviour amonug black youth on a national scale and perpetuate hatered here in America.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: health, sudan, africa, refugee, world-news, south-sudan, yida, jamam
  • 4
    Jul
    2012
    4:41pm, EDT

    Yida refugee camp flooded with North Sudanese

    Paula Bronstein / Getty Images

    A girl is measured at a field hospital for malnourished children at the Yida refugee camp along the border with North Sudan on July 4 in Yida, South Sudan.

    Paula Bronstein / Getty Images

    A girl's arm is measured at a field hospital for malnourished children at the Yida refugee camp on July 4 in Yida, South Sudan.

    Getty Images reports: Yida refugee camp in South Sudan grows each day and now has swollen to 64,317, as the refugees continue to flee from South Kordofan in North Sudan. The numbers of refugees arriving from North Sudan vary from 500 to 1,000 a day.

    Many new arrivals walked from 3 to 5 days to reach the camp without food. The rainy season has increased the numbers suffering from diarrhea and severe malnutrition and 95% of the field hospitals' patients are children under the age of five.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    •Sign up for the msnbc.com Photos Newsletter

    Paula Bronstein / Getty Images

    New arrivals crowd together living in makeshift shelter at the Yida refugee camp along the border with North Sudan.

    • Sudan opposition calls for strikes, protests

    12 comments

    Heart breaking - poor little children, no one deserves to suffer in this way. They flee their homeland and still have nothing - no homes, food, water, medical care. Very sad.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: health, sudan, africa, refugee, world-news, south-sudan, yida
  • 30
    Jun
    2012
    11:52pm, EDT

    Crisis grows at Yida refugee camp in South Sudan

    Paula Bronstein / Getty Images

    Sudanese girls jump rope as many look on at the Yida refugee camp along the border with North Sudan June 30, 2012 in Yida, South Sudan.

    Paula Bronstein / Getty Images

    New arrivals wait in long lines to register with UNHCR at the Yida refugee camp along the border with North Sudan, June 30, in Yida, South Sudan.

    Water has been a precious resource with which aid agencies have struggled. Yida refugee camp has swollen to nearly 60,000, as the refugees flee from South Kordofan in North Sudan with new arrivals at 300-600 a day.  The rainy season has increased the numbers of sick children suffering from diarrhea and severe malnutrition as the international aid community struggles to provide basic assistance to the growing population, as most have arrived with only the clothes they are wearing. Many new arrivals walked from 5 days up to 2 weeks or more to reach the camp.

    Related story: Sudan agrees to allow aid in rebel-held border areas
    Related story: ‘Lost Boys’ peril returns in Sudan

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    15 comments

    birth control Africa has been revieveing Cood Aide for DECADES ! ! ! birth control It absoluetly bores me when the 'uninformed' say "we need to send more Aide. More FREE... birth control ...FREE Medicine, more FREE Food. The facts are clear.... the World has birth control given hundreds on Billion …

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    Explore related topics: sudan, world-news, refugee-camp, south-sudan, yida
  • 24
    Apr
    2012
    7:57am, EDT

    Sudan has declared war on us, says South Sudan president

    Mohamed Nureldin Abdallah / Reuters

    Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir waves to military soldiers on Monday.

    By Reuters

    South Sudan accused Sudan on Tuesday of mounting bombing raids on the newly independent country's oil-producing border region and President Salva Kiir said the latest hostilities amounted to a declaration of a war by his northern neighbor.

    Weeks of cross-border fighting between the former civil war foes have threatened to escalate into a full blown conflict in a region that holds one of Africa's most significant oil reserves.

    Although both Sudan, ruled by President Omar al-Bashir since 1989, and South Sudan, which became independent last July under a peace deal with Khartoum, can ill-afford a protracted war, both countries have fueled tensions with bellicose rhetoric.

    The United States, China and Britain urged both sides to return to the negotiating table.

    "We strongly condemn Sudan's military incursion into South Sudan. Sudan must immediately halt the aerial and artillery bombardment in South Sudan by the Sudan armed forces," White House spokesman Jay Carney said.

    Sudan's foreign minister said he was ready to discuss security issues with the South.


    Philip Aguer, spokesman for South Sudan's army, or the SPLA, said Sudanese Antonov aircraft had flown up to 40 km (25 miles) into South Sudan's territory to bomb the settlements of Teschween, Panakuach and Roliaq on Monday night. Taban Deng Gai, governor of Unity State where the raids occurred, said bombs had hit Lalop market and Panakuach.

    The raids came after the SPLA said Sudan bombed a market early on Monday near the oil town of Bentiu, capital of Unity state, and killed two civilians, an attack they said amounted to a declaration of war. The United Nations condemned the attack.

    The Sudanese army denied carrying out air strikes.

    Speaking in China, which has significant oil and business interests in both African countries, Kiir said Sudan had declared on his country.

    PhotoBlog: South Sudanese run for cover as Sudan bombs border area

    "It (this visit) comes at a very critical moment for the Republic of South Sudan because our neighbor in Khartoum has declared war on the Sudan," he told Chinese President Hu Jintao.

    Hu called for restraint, urging the two neighbors to settle their disputes peacefully.

    In addition to halting nearly all oil production, the recent fighting has displaced some 35,0000 people in areas around Heglig, Talodi and other parts of South Kordofan, the U.N. Refugee Agency said, citing its local partners.

    "The urgent task is to actively cooperate with the mediation efforts of the international community and halt armed conflict in the border areas," China's state television paraphrased Hu as telling Kiir.

    South Sudan said on Friday it would withdrew from the disputed Heglig oilfield it seized earlier this month, bowing to demands from the U.N. Security Council.

    The SPLA's withdrawal from the oilfield, which used to produce about half of Sudan's total oil output, reduced the risk of an all-out war but Juba has accused Khartoum of daily air bombardments on its territories since then.

    "We have not declared war but the SPLA is on maximum alert because if they attack they will not (catch) the SPLA off guard, Aguer told reporters in Juba.

    "If they don't stop bombardment, if they don't stop the incursion into our territories, I assure you the SPLA is capable of retaking all of these areas that they are occupying by force," he said.

    South Sudan became independent last year, breaking up what was Africa's largest country under a 2005 peace agreement that ended two decades of civil war.

    But the two territories have yet to settle a long list of disputes including the position of their shared border, the ownership of critical territories and how much the landlocked South should pay in oil transit fees to Sudan.

    The disputes have already halted nearly all oil production, choking the two countries' largely oil-dependent economies.

    For China, the standoff shows how its economic expansion abroad has at times forced Beijing to deal with distant quarrels it would like to avoid.

    A South Sudanese official, deputy chief of protocol Gum Bol Noah, said China had agreed to provide technical assistance on an alternative oil pipeline to Kenya, but would wait until the situation was calmer.

    Juba has said it wants to build a pipeline within one year to end its dependency on Sudan's oil transit and export facilities, but experts say the project is not viable without significant new oil discoveries.

    Bashir has ruled out a return to negotiations with Juba, saying the South's government only understands "the language of guns".

    But Sudanese Foreign Minister Ali Karti said Khartoum was ready to negotiate with the South on "security issues".

    "I'm now ready to talk, but on the security issues," Karti told reporters in Addis Ababa after meeting officials from the African Union, who have urged both sides to return to talks.

    South Sudan Information Minister Barnaba Marial Benjamin said Kiir's visit to China was intended to improve relations that were strained after Juba expelled the head of a China-led oil consortium it accused of helping Sudan to "steal" southern oil.

    "The relations we have been having with them (China), with Khartoum on the other side, have not been clear," he told reporters in Juba.

    "There must be some sort of relationship where China can play a positive role, even in this war. You see it is like a case of a husband with two wives," he said referring to China's relationship with both Sudans. 

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • James Murdoch grilled in phone hacking probe
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    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    46 comments

    Dear Sudan/South Sudan; Please keep your war to yourselves, and do not interfere with the production or transportation of oil. We wish you both the very best in your efforts to rid the world of each other, and while we would very much like to assist, we simply do not have the capital at this time to …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: war, sudan, africa, south-sudan, slava-kiir
  • 23
    Apr
    2012
    5:33am, EDT

    South Sudanese run for cover as Sudan bombs border area

     

    Goran Tomasevic / Reuters

    A soldier in South Sudan's SPLA army looks up at warplanes as he lies on the ground to take cover beside a road during an air strike by the Sudanese air force in Rubkona, near Bentiu, South Sudan, on April 23, 2012.

    Goran Tomasevic / Reuters

    A woman runs along a road during an air strike by the Sudanese air force in Rubkona on April 23, 2012.

     

    Goran Tomasevic / Reuters

    Smoke rises after the Sudanese air force fired a missile during an air strike in Rubkona on April 23, 2012.

    Reuters reports — Sudanese warplanes carried out air strikes on South Sudan on Monday, killing three people near a southern oil town, residents and military officials said, three days after South Sudan pulled out of a disputed oil field.

    A Reuters reporter at the scene, outside the oil town of Bentiu, said he saw a fighter aircraft drop two bombs near a river bridge between Bentiu and the neighboring town of Rubkona. 

    Sudan leader says he will teach independent South a 'final lesson by force'

    Weeks of border fighting between the two neighbors have brought the former civil war foes closer to a full-blown war than at any time since the South seceded in July. Read more.

    Video: George Clooney calls crisis in Sudan 'real disaster'

    Goran Tomasevic / Reuters

    A soldier in South Sudan's SPLA army walks in a market destroyed in an air strike by the Sudanese air force in Rubkona on April 23, 2012.

    Michael Onyiego / AP

    A South Sudanese soldier has a bullet removed from his leg in the Rubkona Military Hospital on April 22, 2012.

     

    75 comments

    What a damn shame! If South Sudan had Mega Oil, the U.S. and/or NATO would be there protecting them.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: sudan, africa, conflict, world-news, featured, south-sudan, bentiu, goran-tomasevic
  • 20
    Apr
    2012
    5:58am, EDT

    Sudan leader says he will teach independent South a 'final lesson by force'

    Abd Raouf / AP

    Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir, center, waves from the back of a truck during a visit to North Kordofan, Sudan, Thursday, April 19, 2012. The Arab League said Thursday it would hold an emergency meeting over the increasing violence between Sudan and South Sudan.

    By Reuters

    KHARTOUM, Sudan -- Sudan's President Omar Hassan al-Bashir all but declared war against his newly independent neighbor on Thursday, vowing to teach South Sudan a "final lesson by force" after it occupied a disputed oil field.

    South Sudan accused Bashir of planning "genocide" and said it would fight to protect its people.

    Mounting violence since Sudan split into two countries last year has raised the prospect of two sovereign African states waging war against each other openly for the first time since Ethiopia fought newly independent Eritrea in 1998-2000.


    Both are poor countries - South Sudan is one of the poorest in the world - and the dispute between them has already halted nearly all the oil production that underpins both economies. 

    South Sudan says Heglig oilfied reduced 'to rubble'

    Appearing in medal-spangled military uniform at a large rally, Bashir danced side-to-side, waved his walking stick in the air and made blistering threats against the leadership of the South, which seceded last year after decades of civil war.

    "These people don't understand, and we will give them the final lesson by force," the burly military ruler told the rally in El-Obeid, capital of the North Kordofan state. "We will not give them an inch of our country, and whoever extends his hand on Sudan, we will cut it off."

    China, a major investor in the oil industry in both countries, expressed "serious concern" about the increase of tensions and called on both sides to stop fighting, "maintain calm and exercise maximum restraint".

    Adriane Ohanesian / AFP - Getty Images

    A picture taken on April 17, 2012 shows burned buildings which are all that remain of an old Sudan Armed Forces (SAF) compound in Heglig, in Sudan.

    U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said South Sudan's seizure of the oil field was an "illegal act" and called on both countries to stop fighting.

    Bashir: South Sudan rulers are 'insects'
    South Sudan separated from the rest of Sudan with Bashir's blessing last July under the terms of a 2005 peace deal. But since then violence has steadily escalated, fuelled by territorial disputes, ethnic animosity and quarrels over oil.

    Birthday wish: 'Lost boys' pin hopes on independent South Sudan

    Last week, South Sudan seized Heglig, a disputed oilfield near the border between the two countries, claiming it as its rightful territory and saying it would only withdraw if the United Nations deployed a neutral force there.

    Sudan's armed forces spokesman Al-Sawarmi Khalid said by phone the army was now fighting "inside Heglig."

    South Sudan's army (SPLA) said it had repulsed a large attack on Heglig on Wednesday evening, stopping Sudan's forces about 18 miles from the territory.

    "The SPLA maintained its position," spokesman Philip Aguer said. He also accused Sudan of launching another attack in the border regions of South Sudan's Western Bahr al-Ghazal state.

    In a sign of the conflict widening, the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) - considered the most militarily potent of the rebel factions in Sudan's western Darfur region - claimed it had launched an assault on the al-Kharsana oil region near Heglig.

    PhotoBlog: Last few licks of paint as South Sudan preps for independence

    "We are surrounding the Sudanese army in the main military base in al-Kharsana," JEM spokesman Gibreel Adam Bilal said by phone. Heglig is hundreds of km away from JEM's bases in Darfur but the group has fought in the Kordofan region in the past. 

    The Sudanese army spokesman, Khalid, denied JEM's statement, saying there was no fighting in the al-Kharsana area. 

    Limited access for independent journalists to Sudan's remote conflict zones makes it difficult to confirm the often contradictory claims issued by all sides. 

    Sudanese Lost Boy Mawut Mayen talks about his life in America and what the new nation of South Sudan means to him.

    African states have often waged war on each other's territory, but it is extremely rare for them to talk openly of fighting against government forces of sovereign neighbors.

    Bashir's address to the rally on Thursday followed a fiery speech to party supporters on Wednesday, when he vowed to "liberate" South Sudan from its ruling party, which he repeatedly referred to as "insects", in a play on its Arabic name.

    South Sudan's Information Minister Barnaba Marial Benjamin responded on Thursday with outrage.

    "Mr. President, we are no insects and if you are launching your genocide activities to the Republic of South Sudan to kill the people of South Sudan .... we can assure you we will protect the lives of our citizens."

    However, he also said South Sudan was willing to resume talks immediately on all outstanding issues.

    "The Republic of South Sudan is not in a state of war, nor is it interested in war with Sudan," he said.

    In both speeches, Bashir vowed to retake the Heglig oilfield, which he said was part of Sudan's Kordofan region. But he also said that alone would not end the conflict.

    "Heglig is not the end, but the beginning," he said in Thursday's speech.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world



     

     

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    115 comments

    Sooooooooo........when are we going to bomb, invade and occupy THOSE countries???????? Pffffffffffft. *Rolls Eyes*

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    Explore related topics: sudan, africa, genocide, featured, bashir, south-sudan
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