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by Staff Writers Juba (AFP) July 8, 2012 Nobel Peace Prize laureate Desmond Tutu on Sunday appealed for peace in troubled South Sudan, on the eve of the country's first anniversary. Tutu was speaking to political, military and religious leaders from the world's youngest nation, where looming conflict with the rump state of Sudan and dim economic prospects cast a pall over celebrations. "God wants to make South Sudan prosperous and peaceful," the 80-year-old retired South African archbishop said. "Because of war, they say 40 percent of your people, four out of every ten, depend on food from outside," he said. "We want to return to come again and celebrate your nationhood with you and see a South Sudan that grows its own food, and is eradicating poverty and ignorance," Tutu added. Landlocked South Sudan, which relies on the infrastructure of the North to export its oil, decided to stop pumping crude barely six months after becoming a state despite it almost being its only source of revenue. Juba, still reeling from over half a century of civil war, was angered to see Khartoum siphoning off its crude after a row over pipeline fees. "Your oil is not flowing, and it's not God that closed the pipes -- it's war. Stop the war, and the oil will flow," Tutu said. Tutu was on a visit with two other senior peace negotiators -- Finland Martti Ahtisaari and Ireland's Mary Robinson. The trio were expected in Khartoum later. Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir was the first head of state to recognise the south's independence last year and attended the July 9 celebrations that officially partitioned the state he has ruled fore more than two decades. But any hope of an amicable divorce soon faded. South Sudanese President Salva Kiir said Sunday that Bashir had turned down his invitation to attend the anniversary ceremonies. "I personally invited President Bashir, and it is him who has refused.... He has refused to come to the South," Kiir said. "I want President Bashir and myself, as friends... to talk to one another, so we solve the problems," he added. "Let us maintain peace, that is what we lack."
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