May 03, 2012: The Security Council today called on Sudan and South Sudan to immediately
end hostilities and resume negotiations within two weeks to resolve all outstanding
issues, and voiced its intention to take “appropriate measures” if the parties do
not comply. In a unanimously adopted resolution, the 15-member Council determined
that the prevailing situation along the border between Sudan and South Sudan constitutes
“a serious threat to international peace and security.”
South Sudan became
independent from Sudan in July last year, six years after the signing of the peace
agreement that ended decades of warfare between the north and the south. However,
the peace between the two countries has been threatened recently by clashes along
their common border and outstanding post-independence issues that have yet to be resolved.
Tensions have increased in recent weeks after South Sudanese forces moved into the
oil-producing region of Heglig in Sudan’s South Kordofan state before eventually departing,
and Sudanese forces engaged in the bombardment of South Sudanese territory.
The
Council decided that the two countries shall, among other measures, immediately cease
all hostilities; unconditionally withdraw all of their armed forces to their side
of the border; activate, within one week, the necessary border security mechanisms;
and immediately cease hostile propaganda and inflammatory statements in the media.
It also decided that Sudan and South Sudan shall unconditionally resume negotiations
– to be concluded within three months – to reach agreement on arrangements concerning
oil and associated payments, the status of nationals of one country resident in the
other, resolving the status of disputed and claimed border areas and border demarcation,
and the final status of the disputed area of Abyei.
The Council “expresses
its intention, in the event that any or all of the parties have not complied with
the decisions set forth in this resolution, to take appropriate additional measures
under Article 41 of the Charter as necessary.” Article 41 falls under the UN Charter’s
Chapter VII, which deals with threats to the peace, breaches of the peace and acts
of aggression. It states that the Council may decide what measures – not involving
the use of armed force – are to be employed to give effect to its decisions, and it
may call on the Members of the United Nations to apply such measures. These may include
complete or partial interruption of economic relations and of rail, sea, air, postal,
telegraphic, radio, and other means of communication, and the severance of diplomatic
relations.