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Powell To ‘Encourage Progress’ At Sudan Peace Talks
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Powell’s decision to attend could mean a breakthrough in Sudan peace talks (AFP)
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BANGKOK,
October 20 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – U.S. Secretary of
State Colin Powell will travel to Kenya this week to "encourage
progress" in Sudan peace talks and meet top Kenyan officials,
according to the State Department Monday, October 20.
Powell
will arrive in Nairobi Tuesday from Bangkok where he is attending the
annual Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit with U.S. President
George W. Bush, department spokesman Richard Boucher said, reported
Agence France-Presse (AFP).
"Secretary
Powell will ... engage with the Sudanese parties to encourage progress
in the peace process," he said in a statement. "The success
of this process is an important (Bush) administration goal."
Boucher
added that Powell would also see senior officials in the Kenyan
government to follow up on President Mwai Kibaki's state visit to
Washington earlier this month during which “the war on terrorism”
was a major topic.
Kenya's
economy is heavily dependent on the tourism sector which has been
badly damaged by a series of warnings from the United States and other
nations alerting their citizens to “terrorist threats” in the
country.
Kenyan
officials, including Kibaki when he was in Washington, have
repeatedly, but unsuccessfully, appealed for the U.S. warning - which
cites the threat of “terrorists” using shoulder-fired missiles to
down commercial aircraft - to be lifted.
The
Sudan peace talks, the latest round of which opened northwest of
Nairobi Friday, appear to be yielding significant progress but it was
not clear Monday whether Powell's plan to attend signaled that a
breakthrough on a final agreement was imminent.
State
Department officials told AFP Sunday that Powell had decided to make
the trip after lengthy consideration but played down earlier
suggestions that he would not go unless a deal to end Africa's longest
running civil war was in the works.
Kenyan
Foreign Minister Kalonzo Musyoka, whose country is host and mediator
at the talks, said last week that he expected Powell to participate
either "to encourage both parties or to witness the signing of
the agreement."
Participants
in the talks - including the delegation leaders from both sides,
Sudanese Vice President Ali Osman Taha and John Garang, leader of the
Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA) - have expressed optimism about
reaching a permanent settlement in short order.
"I'm
optimistic," Garang said in comments published Saturday in the
pan-Arab daily Al-Hayat. "I believe we can sign as soon as
possible."
Taha
was similarly upbeat at the opening of the talks Friday.
"We
are here with full dedication and determination to settle the
remaining issues and we hope that in this hall that we signed an
agreement on security, we will also sign a comprehensive peace
agreement," he said.
Asked
if a final deal was feasible during the current round, Nick Haysom, an
advisor to the lead Kenyan mediator, said: "It is possible."
Bush
has been anxious to see progress in the effort to end the 20-year-old
war which has pitted rebels from the south against the northern
government in Khartoum.
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Garang (L) and Taha during the start of latest round of talks (AFP) |
Encouraged
particularly by his conservative Christian supporters, the U.S.
President appointed a special envoy to the peace process - former U.S.
senator John Danforth - and has approved U.S. participation in the
mediation which is led by the regional Intergovernmental Authority on
Development (IGAD) group.
U.S.
officials have held out the possibility of removing Sudan from its
list of "state sponsors of terrorism" and removing other
sanctions now in place against Khartoum as encouragement to reach a
deal.
The
last round of talks ended in late September with Taha and Garang
signing a landmark deal on security arrangements for a six-year
transition period during which the rebel-controlled south will enjoy
self-rule.
Under
that deal, after the test period of autonomy, an internationally
supervised referendum will be held to allow the southern Sudanese to
choose whether to remain part of Sudan or become independent.
The
latest round is aimed at ironing out differences on the three
outstanding issues: power- and wealth-sharing and the status of three
disputed geographical areas.
War
erupted in Sudan in 1983 and has since killed more than 1.5 million
people and displaced four million others.
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