KHARTOUM — Sudan's president has turned down an invitation from the African Union to meet South Sudan's leader Wednesday to move forward stalled talks to end hostilities, state news agency SUNA said Tuesday. The neighbors came close to war when border fighting escalated in April, the worst violence since South Sudan declared its independence a year ago under a 2005 agreement that ended decades of civil war. African Union-sponsored talks between negotiators from both sides have ground to a halt over disputed issues including where to mark the border and how much landlocked South Sudan should pay to export oil through northern pipelines. The two countries face the threat of sanctions from the UN Security Council if they do not resolve their disputes by Thursday. Former South African President Thabo Mbeki, the AU's mediator, invited Sudanese leader Omar Hassan Al-Bashir to meet South Sudan's President Salva Kiir in Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa Wednesday, Sudan's foreign ministry told SUNA. But Bashir turned down the meeting because of a previously scheduled visit to Qatar, the ministry said. “The government prefers that such a summit should be held after good preparation and planning,” ministry spokesman El-Obeid Morawah told the state news agency. He said a presidents' summit “should not discuss details of negotiations but finalize certain issues to get positive results for the situation of both countries”. The two sides have made progress on oil talks but have still not reached an agreement, Morawah said. Talks over the disputed border will resume on Wednesday, he said. There was no immediate comment from South Sudan or the African Union. — Reuters