Fresh headache for Museveni as Ethiopia army enters Juba.
  
  africareview.com - 23 minutes ago
  
  Ethiopian soldiers in Barentu, Eritrea in this photo taken in 2000.
  Ninety have been deployed in South Sudan. PHOTO | FILE
  
  The first group of 90 Ethiopian peacekeepers have arrived in the South
  Sudan capital Juba, as the elements of Igad's regional Protection and
  Deterrent Force begin to fall into place.
  
  Their arrival a fortnight ago, however, does not pave the way for the
  near-term withdrawal of Ugandan troops from the conflict as the
  numbers are far below the required 2,500 boots on the ground.
  
  But experts still see the deployment as a potential game changer as it
  places Ethiopia squarely at the centre of efforts to return peace to
  South Sudan.
  
  It also raises questions on how the Ugandan and Ethiopian militaries
  will relate in the volatile country. The two countries are said to
  have held a couple of high-level meetings in the past four months.
  
  Commenting on the impact of this on Uganda's tenure in Juba, Uganda
  People's Defence Force deputy spokesperson Maj Henry Obbo said: "The
  force that has arrived is very small and they are here just to prepare
  the ground for the regional force. When the other units are fully on
  the ground, we shall withdraw."
  
  The Riek Machar side in the conflict has demanded the withdrawal of
  Ugandan troops as a precondition for further progress in the peace
  negotiation.
  
  READ: Machar rebuffs Museveni's overtures
  
  Igad confirmed the Ethiopian deployment. "The information that is
  publicly available on the force at the moment is scanty. What I can
  tell you certainly is that the Igad Monitoring and Verification
  Mechanism now forms part of UNMISS under the mission's reinvigorated
  mandate -- and a first detachment of Ethiopian troops within the Igad
  MVM PF arrangement arrived in Juba towards the third week of last
  month," said Igad spokesperson Tigist Hailu.
  
  Kenya and Rwanda are supposed to contribute troops for the mission but
  are yet to do so. The so-called Troika countries -- the US, Norway and
  UK -- who had promised to finance the force are yet to commit funding
  to the mission.
  
  READ: Broke Igad fails to stop the war
  
  The regional force is expected to provide protection for the Igad
  monitors investigating human-rights abuses and protect key
  installation in addition to performing UNMISS tasks.
  
  It will also replace the estimated 4,000 Ugandan troops that have been
  standing between former vice president Riek Machar's rebels and the
  government in Juba.
  
  The 2,500 Igad troops are supposed to form part of the 12,500 strong
  United Nations Mission in South Sudan.
  
  Currently, UNMISS has 7,000 troops on the ground, a number it is
  supposed to top up by 3,000.
  
  However, a key challenge is the pace of deployment of the additional
  forces as well as the disposition of these forces in fulfilling the
  mandate to protect civilians.
  
  Though the UNMISS troops are supposed to deploy in August, it remains
  unclear what the deployment schedule will be for the approximately
  2,500 troops expected to serve in the Igad Protection Force under the
  UNMISS chain of command.
  
  READ: UN extends South Sudan mission
  
  A related issue is the anticipated participation of an infantry
  battalion from China in UNMISS. China has a strong economic stake in
  the oil sector in South Sudan, and it has been reported that it may
  primarily be interested in defending its workers at oil facilities.
  
  READ: Rebels oppose guarding of South Sudan oil installations
  
  "A key question is how amenable these troops will be to protecting
  civilians not directly linked to these facilities," said the UN
  Security Council report for June.
  
  While Ethiopia is also hosting and chairing the peace negotiations,
  information indicates that the Security Council last week tipped an
  Ethiopian general to command the enlarged UNMISS force.
  
  The new role puts Ethiopia at the centre of the South Sudan war.
  
  Ethiopia already has over 2,000 troops as part of the UN troops in the
  Abyei region, the contested border area of South Sudan and Sudan. This
  UN group is also commanded by an Ethiopian general.
  
  "This may turn out to be a game changer. The burden of bringing peace
  may fall on them now that other countries that were supposed to deploy
  are quiet," said regional security analyst David Pulkol, formerly
  chief of Uganda's external intelligence agency.
  
  "Ethiopia is fed up with the ping pong between Machar and Kiir. They
  want to see an end to the war and have the capacity to even deploy
  22,000 troops or more. The peace talks are not making any headway now;
  the talks were postponed indefinitely and we need a way forward," said
  an Ethiopian official who preferred anonymity.
  
  Uganda deployed troops in South Sudan on December 15, 2013. In March,
  Kampala said that it was ready to withdraw from South Sudan as soon as
  the Igad led force was on the ground. However, as Uganda waits for the
  vacuum to be filled, there is rethinking in Kampala on how they would
  work with Ethiopia.
  
  Ethiopia needs to play a neutral force and not be seen to side with Dr
  Machar, since Uganda has declared support for President Kiir and its
  troops are fighting alongside the South Sudanese army.
  
  "They must find a working position with Ethiopia and stop the
  situation from degenerating. The two countries must take a decision to
  identify and empower a moderate group to take charge and isolate the
  extremists," said Mr Pulkol.
  
  Said the Ethiopian source: "The hard question for us is whether we are
  just going to watch as the situation deteriorate. There is a political
  vacuum and tension is building in Juba."
  
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  SIBOMANA Jean Bosco
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Posted by: Jean Bosco Sibomana <sibomanaxyz999@gmail.com>
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