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LAGOS, Oct. 20 (Xinhuanet) -- The sixth round of
African Union (AU)-sponsored talks on the 32-month crisis in Sudan's Darfur
region ended on Thursday in Nigeria with all parties agreeing general principles
on the thorny issue of power sharing.
"The sixth round has ended. The
seventh round of talks will be held on November 20 in Abuja," AU spokesman
Moussa Hamani told Xinhua from the Nigerian capital.
The talks which began in Abuja on September 15 were
bogged downas a division in the larger one of the two rebel groups in Darfur,the
Sudan Liberation Movement/Army (SLM/A), and the deteriorating situation in
Darfur undermined the pace of the negotiations.
Hamani, however, insisted that the talks are still
"on a good way" and a statement issued at the end of Thursday's meeting said
some progress had been made on the substantive issue of power sharing.
"In concrete terms, we are able to reach agreement on
the following: a. human rights and fundamental freedoms; b. criteria and
guidelines for power sharing," said the statement but did not give details.
According to the statement jointly signed by the
Sudanese government and the two rebel groups, the parties also discussed the
federal system and all levels of governance.
"We are confident that even though modest progress
was made during this session, the foundation had been laid to enable us move
forward on the substantive issues that are on the agenda for the power sharing
negotiations, during the next round," it said.
The statement said the AU, the World Bank and
international partners will convene a workshop on wealth sharing in Nairobi,
Kenya on November 11 in preparation for the technical discussions on this issue.
Meanwhile, all the parties once again affirmed "their
determination to make the next round a decisive one and to work tirelessly for
the achievement of that objective," it added.
The Darfur conflict, which pits the SLM/A and the
second rebel group, the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) against the Sudanese
government since February 2003, has claimed many lives and driven out more than
one million others from their homes.
The AU has brokered a shaky ceasefire and struggled
to find a lasting solution through five previous rounds of talks, which however
failed to get substantial agreements. Enditem |