"The problem is not the (rebel) SPLM-IO any more, the delays are on
the government side," said SPLM-IO negotiator Taban Deng Gai.
Riek
Machar, South Sudan's then rebel leader, talks to his men in a
rebel-controlled territory in Jonglei State, South Sudan, in this
January 31, 2014 file photo.
South Sudan's government and rebels are wrangling over weaponry and therefore still at odds over the terms for allowing rebel leader Riek Machar to return to the capital, a government negotiator said on Thursday.
On Wednesday, the two sides said a deal had been reached on Machar's delayed return to form a unity government.
However, government negotiator Michael Makuei
now says the government cannot allow the rebels to bring some of the
weapons proposed including rocket-propelled grenade launchers.
"The problem is not the (rebel) SPLM-IO any more, the delays are on the government side," said SPLM-IO negotiator Taban Deng Gai.
The
chairman of the Joint Monitoring and Evaluation Commission (JMEC),
Festus Mogae, said after a hastily convened meeting aimed at resolving
the dispute that a proposal had been presented to the government and
SPLM-IO.
"The SPLM-IO accepted the proposal but the government gave their reservation," he said.
JMEC,
which includes Western powers, African representatives and others, had
proposed allowing Machar to bring 195 members of his forces, part of a
quota agreed in a peace deal, and a limited amount of arms.
The
two South Sudan rivals have strained the patience of international
mediators, frustrated by continued wrangling after the peace deal was
signed in August to end more than two years of fighting in a nation that
gained independence in 2011.
Machar, who will be
First Vice President in a transitional government with President Salva
Kiir, was due to fly back early this week.
But his
return was postponed, the latest in a series of such delays, in a
dispute over how many soldiers and weapons he could bring.
Mogae
said there would be further talks on Friday and, if there was no
breakthrough, the matter would be sent to the U.N. Security Council and
African Union peace and security council for "an appropriate response".
The
United States and U.N. Security Council have voiced concern over the
latest delay to Machar's return after a conflict in which thousands have
been killed and more than two million forced to flee their homes.
Kiir's sacking of Machar as his deputy in 2013 precipitated the crisis that led to a conflict in December 2013.
Fighting has often run along ethnic lines, pitting Kiir's dominant Dinka ethnic group against Machar's Nuer.
The conflict has hammered the economy and left swathes of the 11 million population without enough food.
Oil
production, South Sudan's main source of revenue, has tumbled as oil
fields have been cut off and global prices have dropped.
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