JUBA (Reuters) – South Sudan, embroiled in border fighting with its northern neighbour Sudan for the
past month, said on Friday that Sudanese-backed rebel militia had attacked a town in the South’s oil-producing Upper Nile
state, broadening the conflict.
“A militia that is supported by the Sudanese Armed Forces attacked a place…near Malakal and the
SPLA (South Sudanese army) has repulsed them,” said SPLA spokesman Philip Aguer.
“There are no details on casualties,
they are still being pursued,” he said.
Sudan’s army spokesman, al-Sawarmi Khalid, could not immediately be reached
on his mobile phone. Khartoum denies supporting any rebels in South Sudan.
Khartoum and Juba accuse each other of
supporting rebel militias to destabilise their opponents, and each denies the other’s charges. South Sudan gained
independence from Sudan in July after five decades of intermittent civil war.
Malakal is the administrative centre of
Upper Nile, a volatile area bordering Sudan and Ethiopia. It is also a base for many U.N. agencies and international aid
groups.
Fighting along the 1,800 km (1,100 mile) contested border in what was once Africa’s largest country erupted
in late March after Sudan and South Sudan failed to resolve a number of contentious issues including oil export fees and
citizenship.
The skirmishes have threatened to escalate into a full-blown conflict, which neither can afford. Both
economies have suffered from the shutdown of most of their oil production as a result of the conflict.
South Sudan
seized the contested Heglig oilfield earlier this month, on which Sudan relied for about half its oil output, but withdrew
after immense international pressure. Juba has since then accused Khartoum of launching air strikes on its territory, a
charge Sudan denies.
China and the African Union have stepped up diplomatic efforts in the past week to try to bring
the rivals back to the negotiating table.