Fighting is continuing unabated in South Sudan as the two sides prepare to begin peace talks in Ethiopia.
A South Sudanese army spokesman told the BBC that clashes were continuing in Bor and parts of Unity state.
The talks appear to have been delayed as the full government delegation has not yet arrived in Addis Ababa, officials say.
Aid agencies say supplies are urgently needed for the many thousands of people forced to flee their homes.
Conditions have deteriorated in Awerial refugee camp on the banks of the Nile - now home to some 75,000 people who have fled the fighting in nearby Bor, the capital of Jonglei state, now in rebel hands.
"There is no clean drinking water. Five boreholes - it's just not enough," David Nash of the medical charity MSF told the BBC.
"People are drinking water straight out of the river Nile. It's muddy, it's not good. And there are no latrines, so open defecation is happening. Conditions for an outbreak of watery diarrhoea are perfect."
The bishop of Bor, Ruben Akurdit Ngong, who fled the fighting on Sunday and is now in the capital Juba, described the town as a "war zone" with "dead bodies everywhere".
"When you are in Bor town, you move around closing your nose because of the terrible smell," he told the BBC's Newsday programme.
Tricky talksColonel Philip Aguer of the government's Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA), confirmed that Bor was in rebel hands.
Bor, 200km (125 miles) north of Juba, has changed hands three times in the past two weeks.
The SPLA "withdrew tactically but fighting is still going around Bor town and it is a matter of time that SPLA will restore stability to the area", the colonel told the BBC.
He also said fighting was taking place in Unity state's western Mayom area and around the oil fields in the north.
A state of emergency was declared by President Salva Kiir on Wednesday in Unity and Jonglei.
At least 1,000 people have died and some 180,000 people forced from their homes since fighting erupted last month between supporters of President Kiir and those of his sacked deputy Riek Machar.
But what began as a power struggle between the two men has taken on the overtones of an ethnic conflict between members of Mr Kiir's Dinka community and the Nuer of Mr Machar.
An Ethiopian official told Reuters news agency that the talks in Addis Ababa would begin with the two sides separately meeting mediator Seyoum Mesfin before "hopefully" proceeding to face-to-face talks.
But on Thursday afternoon, the official said: "Only half of the government's delegation are here. The rest are set to arrive this evening."
Observers say the discussions are likely to be complicated, as the two sides will have to agree on a mechanism to monitor a ceasefire.
Mr Kiir has already ruled out any power-sharing arrangement with Mr Machar in the longer term.
South Sudan is the world's newest state. It was formed in 2011, gaining independence from Sudan after decades of conflict.
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