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D Dominion Energy Inc

51.50
0.34 (0.66%)
04 May 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Type
Dominion Energy Inc NYSE:D NYSE Common Stock
  Price Change % Change Share Price High Price Low Price Open Price Shares Traded Last Trade
  0.34 0.66% 51.50 51.85 50.66 51.67 3,741,757 01:00:00

South Sudan Government Recaptures Key Oil Hub

10/01/2014 7:00pm

Dow Jones News


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JUBA, South Sudan -- South Sudanese troops on Friday recaptured the key northern oil city of Bentiu from rebel forces, officials said, following days of fierce fighting that has forced tens of thousands to flee the area.

A spokesman for President Salva Kiir said the city, one of two state capitals that were in rebel hands, was "now under our control."

There was no immediate comment from the rebels, although the independent Tamazuj radio station said the city--already ransacked and mostly emptied of its civilian population--fell back into government hands around midday after rebel fighters melted away in the face of a huge offensive.

Quoting witnesses, the radio also said there was fighting within the ranks of the rebel force prior to the fall of the city, and that several fighters were shot dead by government forces while trying to seek shelter at a UN compound.

The government also said it was mobilizing thousands of additional troops, who are expected to join the offensive on Jonglei State capital Bor, now the last remaining rebel stronghold.

In neighboring Ethiopia, regional mediators said they were still optimistic that peace delegates from the two sides meeting in a luxury hotel in Addis Ababa would agree to ceasefire and bring an end the nearly month-old conflict.

The United Nations has said that "very substantially in excess" of 1,000 people have already been killed in the fighting, and that nearly a quarter of a million people have fled their homes--many of them fleeing a wave of ethnic violence.

However the International Crisis Group, an independent think-tank, said reports from across the world's newest state indicate that the real death toll is far higher.

"Given the intensity of fighting in over 30 different locations in the past three weeks, we are looking at a death toll approaching 10,000," ICG analyst Casie Copeland said.

The U.S., which was instrumental in helping South Sudan win independence from Khartoum in 2011, also said it feared the country risked imploding and urged the two sides to immediately agree to a truce.

"Today, tragically, the world's youngest country and undoubtedly one of its most fragile democracies is in danger of shattering," U.S. Assistant Secretary for Africa Linda Thomas-Greenfield told lawmakers in Washington.

"Each day that the conflict continues, the risk of all-out civil war grows as ethnic tensions rise."

Fighting began on December 15, when President Salva Kiir accused his former deputy Riek Machar of attempting a coup, and rapidly spread with government units divided along ethnic lines and local militia forces siding with the rebels.

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