Machar returned to the capital Juba in April after a shaky peace deal but left again last month when new clashes broke out.
At least nine people were killed in South Sudan over the weekend in renewed clashes between troops loyal to President Salva Kiir and those of his longtime rival Riek Machar, a spokesman for Machar said on Monday.
Machar,
the former vice president, and his SPLM-IO group have been caught up
with more than two years of on-and-off, ethnically charged fighting with
supporters of Kiir.
Machar returned to the capital Juba in April after a shaky peace deal but left again last month when new clashes broke out.
Kiir
replaced Machar as vice president last week with Taban Deng Gai, after
Machar ignored Kiir's request to return to Juba, further deepening a
split in Machar's SPLM-IO party.
Nyarji Jermlili
Roman, the deputy spokesman for Machar, said the nine died on Sunday
when they ambushed a vehicle carrying government troops in Lainya county
in Central Equatorial state.
"The government
forces attacked our position but our forces, the SPLA-IO, managed to
gain back control of the area called Magila, which is between Wonduroba
and Katigerre," Roman said.
Government
military spokesman Lul Ruai Koang downplayed the weekend clashes, saying
there was "small fighting" between the SPLA and Machar's forces.
"We
engaged them and they tried to put up some resistance, but at the end
we overcame them and they fled to different locations," Koang said.
Koang
accused the SPLA-IO of shelling the government military positions in
Nasir town in Upper Nile state, while the opposition claimed it was the
SPLA that shelled their positions.
Nothing has been heard from Machar since and Kiir replaced him as vice president.
In
a further sign of trouble for the peace deal, Lam Akol, head of the
opposition Democratic Change group, stepped down from his post as
agriculture minister that he assumed after Kiir named a new unity
cabinet following the peace deal.
"One side has decided to abrogate (the peace deal)," Akol told a news conference in the capital of neighbouring Ethiopia, Addis Ababa, on Monday.
The
United States said over the weekend it had received "disturbing
reports" of renewed violence in the south of the country and the United
Nations is considering imposing an arms embargo.
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