South
Sudan crisis adds to Khartoum's Darfur woes
KHARTOUM
Petroleumworld.com
10 12 07
Sudan was beset by crises on two fronts Thursday
after the main party in the south withdrew from government because of Khartoum's
failure to share power and as hopes faded for peace in Darfur.
Former rebels from the Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM) suspended their
participation in the national government as fighting escalated in the western
region of Darfur, where rebels have again taken up arms complaining of abuse
and marginalisation by Khartoum.
Darfur peace talks in Libya on October 27 have been put at risk by reports that
Khartoum forces and their allied militias have intensified attacks on the rebels,
including the only faction to have signed a peace deal.
The Sudan Liberation Movement-Unity accused Khartoum of trying to kill its leaders
after the army threatened to shoot down an African Union plane carrying the group's
military leadership.
The leaders were headed to the southern capital of Juba for "routine bilateral
talks with SPLM leaders," spokesman Mahjoub Hussein told AFP.
UN envoy to Darfur Jan Eliasson warned that any delay to the Libya talks would
lead to more violence, as UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon accused the government
of slowing the deployment of a bolstered peacekeeping force.
In Khartoum, a senior SPLM official said the decision to withdraw from government
was taken at a meeting in Juba presided over by party leader Salva Kiir.
"Our participation in the government is frozen until we can find a solution
to our differences" with the north, he said.
But later in the day, SPLM members said they were open to talks with their northern
partners, saying their decision to quit was a way to "sound the alarm" over
delays in implementation of a peace deal between north and south.
"We are ready to sit with the National Congress Party to discuss the problems," Yasser
Arman, joint secretary general of the SPLM told reporters, refering to President
Omar al-Beshir's northern party which dominates the national government.
"We are knocking at the door of the NCP and we hope to have an answer and
to work together for a real partnership," he said.
The SPLM and its armed wing signed the Comprehensive Peace Agreement with Khartoum
in 2005, ending 21 years of war between the Muslim north and Christian and animist
south that killed at least two million people and displaced millions more.
While former southern rebel leader Salva Kiir holds the post of first vice president
in the national government, further implementation of the agreement has been
dogged by problems and mutual accusations of stalling.
The SPLM has 19 ministers and deputy ministers in the cabinet, as well as its
own parliament sessions in Juba, the capital of the semi-autonomous south.
The SPLM official said key problems were the withdrawal of northern troops from
the south, the fate of the disputed oil-rich region of Abiye and "the evolution
of democracy in Sudan," adding that the group would return to government
once the differences were resolved.
In Darfur, the Sudan Liberation Army faction of Minni Minawi, the only rebel
group to have signed a 2006 peace deal with Khartoum, threatened to take up arms
again after it said more than 50 people were killed in a government-backed attack
on Muhajariya, a southern Darfur town it controls.
The following day the UN reported clashes between government troops and Minawi
forces near the north Darfur town of Tawila, but the circumstances were unclear.
Eliasson, outlining efforts to broaden rebel attendance at the talks, which at
least two rebel factions have said they will not attend, said any delay to negotiations "will
lead to more bloodshed."
He described the situation in Darfur as "deeply alarming" and said
he hoped the talks would end fighting on the ground.
UN chief Ban said in a report that Khartoum was slowing down the deployment of
the 26,000-strong hybrid UN-AU force.
"The implementation timeline for UNAMID is being delayed owing to ... delays
in obtaining feedback regarding the list of troop-contributing countries submitted
to the government of Sudan," said the report released Thursday.
"I remain extremely concerned about the continuing violence in Darfur. The
ongoing loss of life and displacement of civilians is unacceptable and is not
contributing to an atmosphere conducive to peace talks" in Libya.
A UN Security Council report also accused the Sudanese government of "continued
violation" of an arms embargo by sending weapons and other military equipment
into Darfur.
" The government has shipped arms and equipment, including military airplanes
and helicopters, by air into the airports of Darfur's three provincial capitals," the
report found.
In Khartoum, Eliasson called on all parties to seize the opportunity at the Libya
talks on October 27 to end the conflict which has killed 200,000 in four years.
" This is an opportunity to change the future ... The alternative to me is
very scary."
Story
by Mohamed Hasni from AFP
AFP 11 2014 GMT 10 07
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