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Sudan opens border with South Sudan for first time since secession split in 2011

by Compiled from Wire Services

KHARTOUM Jan 27, 2016 - 12:00 am GMT+3
A woman and her child from the Nuba Mountains in Sudan wait outside of the Yida refugee camp registration center in Yida, South Sudan. (AFP Photo)
A woman and her child from the Nuba Mountains in Sudan wait outside of the Yida refugee camp registration center in Yida, South Sudan. (AFP Photo)
by Compiled from Wire Services Jan 27, 2016 12:00 am
Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir ordered the opening of his country's border with South Sudan for the first time since the south's secession in 2011, state news agency SUNA reported on Wednesday.

"President Omar al-Bashir issued a decree today ordering the opening of borders with the state of South Sudan and ordered the relevant authorities to take all measures required to implement this decision on the ground," SUNA reported.


Relations between Juba and Khartoum had been tense since South Sudan's secession split in 2011 under a peace deal that ended a bloody 22-year civil war, with disputes over several areas along the border.

"Field Marshal Omar al-Bashir, president of the republic, issued a resolution today (Wednesday) opening the border with the state of South Sudan," the Sudanese state news agency SUNA's website said.

The brief statement also said Bashir had ordered the "competent authorities to take all measures for the implementation of this resolution on the ground", but gave no further details.

Juba and Khartoum had remained at odds since 2011 on several unresolved issues from the secession, including the frontier.


The two briefly battled for the Heglig oilfield in April 2012 on the frontier before Sudan took the area.

Bashir's move came days after media reports that South Sudanese President Salva Kiir ordered his troops to withdraw to five miles (eight kilometres) from the border with Sudan.

At independence, South Sudan took most of the formerly united country's oil resources with it, but agreed to pay transit fees to Khartoum for using its pipelines and facilities.

Last week Bashir agreed to review those fees following a request from Juba to lower them.

South Sudan descended into civil war in December 2013 when fighting erupted between forces loyal to Kiir and his then deputy Riek Machar, splitting the country along ethnic lines.

Hundreds of thousands of South Sudanese have fled to neighbouring countries during the conflict, including to Sudan.
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