Renewed fighting in South Sudan that has killed more than 300 people
is set to dominate an African Union summit that starts in the Rwandan
capital of Kigali on Sunday.
A shaky ceasefire has held since late on Monday after fighting raged
for four days in the South Sudanese capital of Juba, forcing 40,000
people to flee their homes.
The violence echoed fighting that triggered the civil war and marks a
fresh blow to last year's deal to end a bitter conflict that began when
President Salva Kiir accused ex-rebel and now Vice President Riek
Machar of plotting a coup.
The unrest has also plunged into doubt a peace deal signed in August 2015.
Al Jazeera's Catherine Soi, reporting from Juba, said the ceasefire
appeared to be holding but there was a sense of uncertainty in the city.
Locals, she said, were wondering about the whereabouts of Machar, who has been in hiding.
"What is certain is that he has not left the country," Soi said. "But
he says he still feels his life is in danger and until his safety is
guaranteed he will not come out."
Speaking to regional grouping IGAD in Kigali on Saturday, UN
Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said a "critical stage" in the South Sudan
crisis had been reached.
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