South Sudan has released four top leaders accused of rebellion and treason, dropping charges of attempting to overthrow the government in a move aimed at ending a four-month-old civil war.
President Salva Kiir yesterday said their release was the "price of peace", adding: "Even if we hang them they cannot compensate those who were killed."
The court order said the men were released "in order to promote peace and reconciliation among our people", while Kiir urged people to respect those released.
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An AFP reporter at the court said the four men were greeted by cheering supporters who lifted them up on to their shoulders into the crowd.
"We were imprisoned without any reason," said freed detainee Pagan Amum, the former secretary general of the ruling party.
In a speech thanking his supporters, he vowed to work to end the vicious conflict.
"We have to return South Sudan to peace and stability," Amum said, adding he would work with both the government and rebels "to end this senseless war that is killing our people."
But Kiir has also ordered the four to remain in the country, warning that they can be "recalled back if the criminal procedures are reviewed".
The detention of the four had been a major sticking point in peace talks, and the gesture comes as the leaders on both sides of the conflict face the threat of UN sanctions amid worsening violence and atrocities.
US State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki welcomed news of the releases as "a step that we support, but it should have happened long ago."
She warned the United States was "actively considering individuals" to be targeted for sanctions saying Washington continued "to be shocked and horrified by the violence on the ground."
Amid a wave of killings, UN human rights chief Navi Pillay is heading to the country on Monday on a joint mission with Adama Dieng, the UN's special envoy for the prevention of genocide.
She is due to spend two days in the capital Juba, where she is scheduled to meet with the president and senior government officials, plus human rights monitors.
Pillay also aims to meet with opposition leaders, either in South Sudan or in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa, where officials have been trying to inject life into stalled peace efforts.