Mr Obama said that “stubborn” president Salva Kiir and his former
deputy Riek Machar were failing to look out for the best interests of
their people, at least 50,000 of whom have been killed and a further one million displaced by 19 months of conflict.
The US president, in Ethiopia as part of a tour aimed at tackling extremism and conflict in the region, said he hoped the parties would commit to a power-sharing deal by a deadline of August 17.
"We don't have time to wait. The conditions on the ground are getting
worse and worse,” he said during a press conference with Hailemariam
Desalegn, the Ethiopian prime minister.
"If we don't see a breakthrough by August 17, we're going to have to
consider what other tools we have to apply greater pressure."
Mr Obama also met the presidents of Uganda, Kenya and Ethiopia, the African Union chairman and the Sudanese foreign minister who have led South Sudan peace talks in Addis. Sudan, from whom South Sudan won independence in 2011, is thought to be arming the rebels while Uganda has been backing the government and protecting the fledgling country’s airport.
Mr Obama’s intervention came after a UN report last month claimed South Sudanese government troops had engaged in a campaign of violence that included raping women and burning them alive in their homes, castrating children and slitting their throats and forcing those suspected of knowledge about the rebels to squeeze hot coals in their hands. Rebel groups are accused of similar atrocities.
A US official suggested that if the two sides cannot agree to a deal, a “Plan B” will be floated which could include an arms embargo and sanctions on individuals' assets and travel.
He indicated that during his meeting Mr Obama would try to encourage Yoweri Museveni, Uganda’s president, to use its influence to nudge Mr Kiir towards a deal.
Discussions are also underway to set up a special tribunal for South Sudan to try those accused of atrocities. The African Union suggested last week it could even send troops if a ceasefire agreement is not reached soon.
John Prendergast, founder of the African advocacy and research group the Enough Project, said the strongest incentive for the two rivals to put down their arms was financial.
“The leaders of the two sides fight on in the belief that there will be no personal consequence, and outside actors collaborate in the destruction of this embryonic state through their military support and collusion in vast corruption, both past and present,” he said.
During the press conference, Mr Obama also vowed to deep economic and security ties with Ethiopia, which is a lead contributor to the African Union force fighting al-Shabaab in Somalia.
But he insisted that increased engagement with Ethiopia, which has a rapidly growing economy and is Africa’s second most populous nation but also one of its most repressive, did not mean he would “bite his lip” about human rights violations.
"I think the prime minister is the first to admit there is still more to do," he said. "Nobody questions our need to engage with large countries where we may have differences on these issues. We don't advance or improve these issues by staying away."
Mr Desalegn, who released five of at least 12 journalists for security offences shortly before Mr Obama’s visit, promised that his commitment to democracy was “real, not skin deep”.
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