By
Jason Straziuso and Tom Odula
NAIROBI,
Kenya (AP) — South Sudan's government on Friday agreed to end hostilities,
regional leaders said at the end of a crisis summit, raising hopes for a
potential breakthrough in efforts to cease violence that has displaced more
than 120,000 people in the world's newest country.
East
African leaders meeting in Kenya under a bloc called IGAD said in a statement
Friday that they "welcomed the commitment by (South Sudan's government) to
an immediate cessation of hostilities."
But
former Vice President Riek Machar, Kiir's political rival who is accused of
orchestrating a failed coup that the government says sparked unrest across the
oil-producing country, was not represented at the summit in the Kenyan capital
of Nairobi.
The
leaders' joint statement said Machar is urged to "make similar
commitments" to end hostilities.
Machar,
the alleged leader of renegade forces now in control of some parts of South
Sudan, remains a fugitive wanted by the military. At least 10 of his political
allies are in detention for their roles in the alleged coup plot. Machar denies
there was a coup attempt, and some officials with the ruling party insist
violence broke out when presidential guards from Kiir's majority Dinka tribe
tried to disarm guards from the Nuer ethnic group of Machar, leading to wider
military clashes along ethnic lines.
Machar,
an influential politician who appears to command the loyalty of Nuer army
officers, has criticized Kiir as a dictator and says he will contest the 2015
presidential election. Kiir had fired Machar as his deputy in July following a
power struggle within the ruling party, stoking ethnic tensions in a country
with a history of divided military loyalties.
IGAD
said it opposes a violent change of government in South Sudan and urged Kiir
and his rivals to start peace talks before the end of 2013.
In
a speech at the Nairobi summit, Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta had noted that
there is "a very small window of opportunity to secure peace" in
South Sudan, where fighting since Dec. 15 has raised fears of full-blown civil
war.
South
Sudan peacefully broke away from Sudan in 2011 after decades of a brutal war of
independence fought against Sudan. The young country has been plagued by
corruption, ethnic tension, and a power struggle within the ruling party that
pits Kiir against Machar.
The number of internally displaced people continues to rise, with many seeking
shelter at U.N. compounds across the country. There are sporadic military
clashes in the oil-rich states of Unity and Upper Nile, potentially endangering
the oil revenues that South Sudan depends on to keep the government running.
The
U.N. said aid agencies need at least $166 million to save lives.
The
top U.N. humanitarian official in South Sudan, Toby Lanzer, said earlier this
week that he believes the death toll has surpassed 1,000. The U.N. also is
investigating alleged mass killings in the latest violence.
"We
have heard reports of extra-judicial killings, arbitrary detentions of
civilians, ill-treatment, abuse and also mass graves," said Hilde Johnson,
head of the U.N. mission in South Sudan. "Our human rights officers have
been working around the clock, throughout this crisis, and they are
investigating these reports and allegations."
Straziuso
reported from Juba, South Sudan. Associated Press reporter Rodney Muhumuza
contributed to this report from Kampala, Uganda.

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