U.S. ready to expand South Sudan sanctions to end violence: envoy

By Lesley Wroughton and Arshad Mohammed NEW YORK (Reuters) - The United States, frustrated with slow progress in South Sudan's peace process, is ready to expand sanctions against political and military figures unless warring parties end the violence quickly, the U.S. envoy to South Sudan said on Thursday. Ambassador Donald Booth said recent measures, including sanctions last week against two military officers on opposite sides of the violence, were intended to signal that the United States would not hesitate to act against those obstructing peace. South Sudan's President Salva Kiir, who is in New York for the U.N. General Assembly, on Thursday failed to attend a meeting on the sidelines on his country's humanitarian crisis, another senior State Department official said. "All of the parties who are involved in the negotiations have come to the conclusion that if the warring parties do not take this more seriously then we have to levy for more serious sanctions on them," the official said, adding this was a view expressed not just by the United States. At least 10,000 people have died and more than 1 million have fled their homes since fierce fighting erupted in December in the capital Juba between forces of President Salva Kiir and supporters of Riek Machar, his former deputy and long-term political rival. "So far the focus has been on military commanders but we're signaling ... we are intending to continue utilizing the executive order in order to give those who need to negotiate the thought that the U.S. is serious, that there are consequences if this continues," Booth said in an interview. "We will continue to move forward on this but we want to use our sanctions in a way that doesn't foreclose negotiations but to facilitate them," he added. Booth said regional African countries are also ready to impose punitive measures if peace talks continue to drag on. Kenya, Uganda, Djibouti, Ethiopia and Somalia have all worked to end fighting in South Sudan. "The continuing conflict continues to undermine their interests more than anybody else's other than the South Sudanese." Booth said. "They also understand the danger of ungoverned or lightly governed spaces and so they don't want to see South Sudan go in that direction." Peace talks in South Sudan resumed last week in the Ethiopian capital and mediators warned time was running out. Over the next few weeks the sides are expected to flesh out details on ending hostilities and disarming rebels groups. The sides are working against a 45-day deadline for reaching an agreement, although Booth suggested there was some deliberate ambiguity in the timeline and it could be extended if there was progress in the talks. "More importantly what is really needed in this 45-day period is to come up with the nature, scope or the shape, as well as the functions of what the transitional government will do," Booth said. (Writing by Lesley Wroughton; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)