ABUJA,
April 30, 2006 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – The Sudanese
government on Sunday, April 30, officially notified the African Union
of accepting its proposed Darfur peace deal, while the rebels stuck a
defiant note demanding modifications.
"The
government ... wishes to confirm its decision to formally accept this
document and its readiness to sign it," according to a statement
from Majzoub al-Khalifa, head of the government's negotiating team at
peace talks in Abuja, Nigeria, cited by Reuters.
"The
government wishes to confirm its full commitment to implement the
agreement in good faith."
The
statement reaffirmed the government's conviction that "any
difficulties that might come up in the implementation stages can be
resolved by consensus between all the parties."
The
announcement crowned all-night discussions at a no-frills hotel on the
outskirts of the Nigerian capital Abuja.
The
AU had set Sunday as a deadline for the government and Darfur rebels
to wrap up negotiations that have dragged on for two years while the
conflict in the vast western region of Sudan has escalated.
The
conflict in the troubled western region, an arid region the size of
France, flared up in February 2003 when rebels from black African
tribes took up arms, complaining of discrimination and oppression by
the Khartoum government.
The
government is accused of unleashing Arab tribal militia known as the
Janjaweed against civilians in a campaign of murder, rape and arson.
The
United Nations maintains that the Darfur conflict is causing the
world’s worst humanitarian crisis at present, estimating that at
least 180,000 people have died from fighting, hunger and disease.
More
than 2 million civilians have fled their homes to camps in Darfur and
across the border into Chad to escape the fighting.
Defiant
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More than 2 million civilians have fled their homes to camps in Darfur and across the border into Chad to escape the fighting. (Reuters)
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The
government said it had decided to sign despite reservations, and
diplomats said the biggest of those centered on disarmament
arrangements.
"What
this (agreement) means, in effect, is that the government has to
disarm the Janjaweed at a time when the rebels will still have their
forces fully deployed, albeit in defensive positions," one
diplomat closely involved in the talks told Reuters.
The
government's statement was the latest in a series of diplomatic moves
to try to convince rebels to drop some of their demands and rely on
conflict resolution mechanisms embedded in the agreement.
The
rebel Sudanese Liberation Movement and the Justice and Equality
Movement have decided not to sign the 85-page AU-drafted accord, their
spokesmen told Agence France-Presse (AFP).
The
groups made separate statements registering their refusal to sign the
agreement after meeting just hours before the AU deadline.
Ahmed
Tugon, JEM chief negotiator, claimed the government's statement
"is an attempt to increase pressure on the movements and it
clearly indicates that this document favors the position of the
government."
The
rebels, split into two movements and three factions with a history of
infighting, want more favorable terms for a planned integration of
some of their forces into the Sudanese army.
They
also demand that Darfur gets a post of Sudanese vice president and a
new regional government.
Several
previous deadlines have passed without any apparent impact on the
discussions.
But
this time AU mediators said they had nothing more to achieve by
listening to the parties' positions.
If
the sides reject this draft, the AU Peace and Security Council was
expected to decide on a new strategy for the peace process.
The
US government and civil society have recently sought to increase
pressure on Khartoum to end the violence.
US
President George W. Bush said "genocide in Sudan is
unacceptable" and endorsed a series of "Save Darfur"
rallies taking place across the US on Sunday, organized by a coalition
of more than 160 religious and humanitarian groups.
Aid
groups say increased fighting in Darfur has made it impossible to
deliver food and medicine to tens of thousands of refugees in Darfur
and in camps across the border in Chad.