China raises initiative to push South Sudan peace process
Updated: 2015-01-13 09:14
(Xinhua)
|
|||||||||
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi (L) meets with his Sudanese counterpart Ali Karti in Khartoum, capital of Sudan, Jan 11, 2015. [Photo/Xinhua] |
KHARTOUM -- Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi proposed here on Monday China's four-point initiative to promote South Sudan's peace process.
Wang raised the initiative at the "special consultation of Inter-Governmental Authority for Development (IGAD)" with the conflicting parties of South Sudan.
In the initiative, Wang urged the conflicting sides to take into account the realistic and long-term interests of South Sudan people and safeguard the peace and stability in the region.
Both sides should abandon the use of force, carry out the signed agreements and reach comprehensive ceasefire without precondition, so as to create favorable conditions for peace talks,
he said.
Wang urges establishment of transition government in South Sudan as soon as possible so as to speed up peace process, and he calls for greater international efforts to support peace process, stability and development in the country.
- Time to become a woman
- The world in photos: Jan 5-11
- Belting out a tune for Beijing
- 66-year-old woman risks life, limb to pay off debt
- Tourists heat up Beijing's frozen lake
- 72nd Golden Globe Awards
- Marching in solidarity: Paris 'unity rally' in photos
- We learn what is love from the 10-year-old schoolboy
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
China's 2014 diplomacy |
CES: Connected cars trends to watch |
Kung fu star's son sentenced to six months in prison |
CES: Spotlight on Chinese gadgets |
95% of netizens disapprove of removal of cleavage scenes |
How does anti-graft watchdog handle petitions? |
Today's Top News
Rail merger threatened by insider trading allegations
Suspect relieved to be home
Li Ka-shing retakes Asia's richest person crown
Uber gets no grief yet in taxi-app ban
Black box of crashed AirAsia jet retrieved
Experts praise reform of Chinese leaders, past and present
Ambitious course set for global airliner market
Washington's Chinatown in flux
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |