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Sudan, Uganda to fight rebels
12/07/2005 13:46 - (SA)
Khartoum - Sudan said on Tuesday it would fully co-operate with Uganda to combat the rebel Lord's Resistance Army (LRA), which has led several recent attacks on civilians in northern Uganda and southern Sudan.
"The Sudanese government is fully committed to work with the Ugandan government for the eradication of the remnants of the LRA's troops in southern Sudan," foreign minister Mustafa Osman Ismail was quoted as saying by the official Sudan news agency.
Last week the Ugandan rebels attacked the area of Rajaf, a couple of kilometres outside the southern Sudanese city of Juba, killing and wounding four people and driving hundreds to seek refuge in the city. In Uganda, rebels killed at least 10 civilians on Sunday.
"This group has become a threat not only to northern Uganda alone but it is now undermining security and peace in southern Sudan, obstructing troops' movement and the civilians convoys," Ismail said. "This is why our efforts will be pooled toward eliminating this group, for the security of southern Sudan and northern Uganda."
The Ugandan army spokesperson said on Monday soldiers had killed the LRA chief of staff and the eldest son of the leader of the group in a battle last month.
Sudan previously supported LRA
Sudan once backed the LRA in its insurgency against the Ugandan government, which was supporting the Sudan People's Liberation Army in its battle against the Islamic government in return. Sudan and Uganda normalised relations in 2001, and Ugandan troops have been allowed to operate in some parts of southern Sudan.
The LRA still maintains bases in remote southern Sudan from which it wages its battles but its presence there faces a setback with the end of Sudan's civil war in January and the inauguration on Saturday of former rebel leader John Garang, who has said he would work for peace in northern Uganda.
Ismail, the foreign minister, promised that Sudan, having now realised peace at home, would co-operate with its neighbours in resolving their problems and other African issues.
Sudan on Saturday began implementation of its January peace agreement with Garang's inauguration as first vice president and the adoption of a new constitution. Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni was one of a number of heads of state who attended the ceremony. He met with senior Sudanese officials in Khartoum.
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