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Annan stresses Sudan's
national unity with solution to Darfur Sudanese president vows to
overcome civil war's bitterness
KHARTOUM, July 9 (Xinhuanet) -- Leaders of the Sudanese interim
government of national unity were sworn in here on Saturday, marking the
beginning of a six-year transitional period and the opening of a new chapter of
peace in the history of the largest African country.
At a ceremony in the presidential palace, Sudanese resident Omar
Hassan al-Bashir signed a new interim constitution and took his oath of office
as president of the interim government.
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| Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir
(C) holds hands with first vice president John Garang (L) and second vice
president Ali Othman Mohammed Taha (R) in Khartoum.
(Xinhua) |
John Garang, head of the former southern rebel Sudan People's
Liberation Movement (SPLM), was sworn in as first vice president and Ali Othman
Mohammed Taha, Sudan's former first vice president, was sworn in as second vice
president.
Under the interim constitution, Garang will head an autonomous
administration in the mainly Christian and animist south during the interim
period leading up to a promised referendum on secession.
The Khartoum government and the SPLM signed a peace deal on Jan.
9 in the Kenyan capital Nairobi to end a 21-year and Africa's longest civil war
in the south.
Speaking at the ceremony, Omar al-Bashir called on the Sudanese
people to overcome the war inflicted bitterness and wounds.
He said it was important to remove landmines from mind and
replace them with forgiveness, love and unity.
He reiterated commitment to ensure an equal share of oil wealth
between the north and the south in accordance with the southern Sudan
Comprehensive Peace Agreement.
He also promised to spare no effort to resolve the conflict in
the western region of Darfur after his government signed a declaration of
principles with two Darfur rebel groups earlier this month in the Nigerian
capital Abuja.
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| Former Sudanese rebel leader John Garang
(L) shakes hands with Sudanese President Omar al-Beshir in Khartoum.
(AFP) |
John Garang, who arrived in the Sudanese capital Khartoum on
Friday for the first time since a rebellion stated in 1983 for
self-determination in the south, said his presence in Khartoum was a real signal
that the war in southern Sudan was over.
The conflict had reportedly left some 2 million people dead,
mostly from war-induced famine and diseases.
The southern peace deal provides for an interim government and
arrangements to share power and wealth.
But it does not cover the separate conflict in Darfur, where
non-Arab ethnic groups took up arms in early 2003 to press demands for an end to
discrimination by Khartoum.
The sworn-in ceremony was witnessed by UN Secretary General Kofi
Annan, Secretary General of the Arab League Amr Moussa, South African President
Thabo Mbeki, Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki, Norwegian Minister of International
Cooperation Hilde Johnson and United States Deputy Secretary of State Robert
Zoellick and other foreign guests.
Annan said that the national unity is incomplete in Sudan unless
conflicts in Darfur and eastern Sudan are settled.
"The peace process between north and south must be made ever
better and it will not be unless it takes place in the east and in the west as
well," Annan said at the sworn-in ceremony.
He said that the task of the interim government must be to
ensure that peace extends to the whole nation of Sudan.
He pointed out that as an immediate priority, therefore, the
government of national unity must work to resolve the conflicts in Darfur and
eastern Sudan.
Annan called on all armed groups that have not yet joined the
national process of unity as well as all political parties to join hand to make
peace a reality through non-violence and democracy.
"Dear friends, for the first time in many years, national unity
for all the people of Sudan is now within reach," the top UN official
said. Enditem
Profile: Sudan's First Vice President John Garang |