South Sudan’s Machar flees to neighboring state: Opposition
(last modified Thu, 18 Aug 2016 14:12:11 GMT )
Aug 18, 2016 14:12 UTC
  • South Sudan’s Machar flees to neighboring state: Opposition

South Sudan’s rebel leader and former first vice president Riek Machar has reportedly left for a neighboring country weeks after he fled the capital, Juba.

An opposition spokesman on Thursday confirmed that Machar had left a day earlier to a “safe country within the region,” and was expected to hold a news conference on Friday.

Machar’s spokesman James Gatdet Dak said in a separate statement that he “has been successfully relocated to a neighboring country" after one month of stay in the bushes around Juba.

Dak thanked rebel forces for foiling what he called a “ruthless attempt” by President Salva Kiir to kill Machar.

Thousands of people have been killed and more than three million forced to flee their homes in the war that started in December 2013, when Kiir sacked Machar as his deputy after accusing him of plotting a coup.

The conflict broke out only two years after the country seceded from Sudan. The two sides eventually signed an agreement in August 2015 to bring the war to an end.

As part of the deal, Machar returned to Juba on April 26 to take up the post of vice president in a national unity government. 

However, peace did not last long as a new wave of fighting erupted on July 8, when gunfire broke out near where Kiir and Machar were meeting in Juba.

During the next several days, more than 300 people were killed in clashes and Machar left the capital after his base in Juba was bombed by troops loyal to Kiir.

The vice president was then removed after being given a 48-hour ultimatum to return to the capital which he ignored. 

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