Thursday, June 18, 2026
NationNewsNewsPeace talks in South Sudan

Peace talks in South Sudan

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP) – Peace talks between warring parties in South Sudan scheduled to be held in Ethiopia were delayed yesterday because the sides haven’t yet agreed upon an agenda, officials said.
Late yesterday, Ethiopian Foreign Minister Tedros Adhanom said the two sides agreed to begin talks today. Two areas the talks will focus on include ending hostilities and the release of political prisoners.
Officials had hoped direct peace talks would begin yesterday after preliminary discussions on Friday.
“You need to stop this senseless war today,” Adhanom told the warring factions.
The slow start to peace talks is a worrying sign for South Sudan, which has seen spiraling, ethnic-based violence the last three weeks.
President Salva Kiir accuses the former vice president, Riek Machar, of an attempted coup. Machar denies the accusation, but forces loyal to him now control two state capitals, including the town of Bor, about 120 kilometres north of the country capital, Juba.
A spokesman for Machar, Yohanis Musa Pouk, said that peace talks won’t be held unless a clear agenda is set first. Pouk said preliminary talks Friday were good, but he couldn’t predict when more advanced talks would begin.
The United Nation’s top humanitarian official in South Sudan, Toby Lanzer, said yesterday that people are continuing to arrive in search of a safe haven at two U.N. bases in South Sudan’s capital. The U.N. is hosting 30 000 refugees in Juba alone, he said. Some 200 000 people are believed to have been displaced by the three weeks of violence.
The largest humanitarian needs are in Awerial, where an estimated 76 000 people have fled violence in the nearby town of Bor, where indiscriminate violence left bodies lying in the street, according to refugee witnesses.