DHAKA: International pressure is bearing down on the two sides in South Sudan`s bloody conflict to launch peace talks, in an effort to keep the young nation from sliding into civil war.
The push comes as 25,000 young men comprising a tribal armed group known as the White Army were reportedly marching on Saturday towards a contested state capital, dimming hopes for a ceasefire.
Peace brokers from East Africa and the Horn of Africa have set a December 31 deadline for President Salva Kiir and de facto rebel leader Riek Machar, the country`s former vice-president, to begin face-to-face talks.
"We, government, are ready to meet even before that," South Sudan`s vice-president, James Wani Igga, told reporters. "It`s now up to Machar to accept the ceasefire."
This is complete intransigence and obstinacy because the main issue now is to stop violence.
James Wani Igga, vice-president
Meanwhile, the estimated 25,000 youths from the Lou Nuer sub-clan - the same tribe Machar is from - were marching on Bor, armed with light weapons and heavy machine guns, Information Minister Michael Makuei Lueth said.
The White Army gets its name from the white ash fighters put on their skin as protection from insects.
"[Machar] has decided to mobilise the youth in the name of his tribe," Lueth said, noting the estimate of 25,000 came from intelligence inside the group itself. "We are monitoring."
A spokesman for the rebels, however, denied Machar was mobilising his tribe, saying the young people were regular soldiers turning their back on the government.
Source: Al-Jazeera
BDST: 1224 HRS, DEC 29, 2013
RS