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Beshir, Garang Face-to-Face for First Time 

Moi, center, with envoys from Sudanese government and southern rebels

KAMPALA, July 27 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) – Sudanese President Omar al-Beshir and John Garang, leader of the rebel Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA), began their first ever face-to-face meeting in Kampala Saturday, July 27, 2002, according to the rebel movement and Ugandan officials.

The meeting, delayed from its scheduled midday (0900 GMT) start, was expected to last two hours and was chaired by Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni in the Uganda International Conference Center, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).

The meeting follows significant progress announced last week after talks in Kenya aimed at ending the civil war in Sudan, which began in 1983 when the SPLA took up arms against the central government in Khartoum to set up a separatist state in the south.

According to BBC’s online news service, Sudan's Vice President, Ali Uthman Muhammad Taha, also said he expects a ceasefire to be implemented with the SPLA within weeks "if people are serious".

Sudanese diplomatic officials told Reuters news agency that al-Beshir and Garang would be discussing a fledgling peace agreement reached in Kenya last weekend.

It is still unclear how the country's oil wealth - largely derived from the south - will be divided, and any actual ceasefire will not take effect until the end of the process.

The two leaders are not expected to get down to detailed negotiations - that will be left to their respective delegations next month. But they are expected to discuss how a transitional government of national unity would work in practice.

The significance of the historic meeting, according to the BBC, is not so much in what is said as the fact that it is taking place at all.

Taha said the Sudanese Government's priority was for a solution within a united Sudan, and the agreement itself made it clear that unity was the preferred option.

"The framework of the protocol is very specific in giving unity a priority," he said.

However, Taha insisted that if there was finally a vote for secession the government would honor the agreement and let the southerners go their own way - taking their oil wealth with them.

After five weeks of peace negotiations ended last week in the Kenyan town of Machakos, the two sides agreed to a protocol that is to give southern Sudan a six-year period during which it enjoys administrative autonomy and not be subject to the Islamic law (Sharia) applied in the north.

At the end of the six years, its people will be asked to vote on whether they want to stay part of the country or secede.

The deal comes less than a year after Washington became actively involved in efforts to end the civil war.

Speaking after the Machakos talks, SPLA officials explained that the conflict started when southern soldiers in the Sudanese army mutinied in November 1983 after former Sudanese president Jaafer Nimeiri decided to abrogate a 1972 agreement that would have established a regional government for the south.

Nimeiri instead divided the south into three regions and placed control of mineral-rich southern regions in the hands of the north.

In the September of that year, Nimeiri also declared Islamic Sharia law as the supreme law of Sudan and Arabic as the official language for schools in southern Sudan, instead of English.

Observers, however, see that as “a false explanation”, as by that time, the mutiny had already begun.

Southern army units joined the SPLA, led by the then renegade Sudanese army officer Garang.

He recruited and trained fighters from southern groups, who felt oppressed by what they called the "Arab ruling clique" in Khartoum.

By 1991, the SPLA controlled nearly 90 percent of the southern region.

A rift within the rebel group in 1991 enabled the government to reverse some of its losses. But after reorganizing and restructuring in 1995, the SPLA pushed ahead in the south and now controls around 95 percent of the region.

The war and related calamities killed up to 1.5 million people and displaced more than four million others, according to humanitarian sources.  

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