Monday, April 16, 2012

MPs in Khartoum brand South Sudan 'enemy' state

Sudanese MPs have voted unanimously to brand South Sudan "an enemy".
"The government of South Sudan is an enemy and all Sudanese state agencies have to treat her accordingly," the resolution said.
A Khartoum information ministry official told the BBC the move was linked to South Sudan's seizure last week of the Heglig oil field.
The South had accused Sudan of launching attacks on its territory from the frontier oil field.
South Sudan seceded in July last year following a civil war which ended in 2005.
But a number of major disputes remain, including over oil and the official demarcation of the international border, and there have been a number of clashes since.
UN camp bombed The BBC's James Copnall in Khartoum says the full ramifications of the parliamentary vote are not clear, but it is evident that both countries are close to a full war.
The speaker of parliament, Ahmed Ibrahim al-Tahir, called for Sudan to overthrow the South Sudanese government, the AFP news agency reports.
Dr Khalid Al Mubarak, London's Sudan embassy spokesperson, told the BBC's Focus on Africa programme that South Sudan has made itself an enemy by crossing the border and occupying Sudan's land.
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