|
Related: EU welcomes signing of Darfur peace
pact Khartoum to sign peace deal with one
Darfur rebel
faction World's inaction on Darfur would worsen
humanitarian efforts: UN
 |
| Stakeholders in the Darfur crisis watch as
Mazjoud el-Khalifa for SDudanese government and Minni Minawi for his
faction of the Sudanese Liberation Army (SLA) sign the African Union draft
peace agreement in Darfur's bloody civil war in Abuja 05 May 2006. (Photo:
Xinhua/AFP) | ABUJA, May 5 (Xinhua) -- The Sudanese government and a major rebel movement in Darfur signed a peace agreement here Friday, marking a notable progress in an international effort to end years of bloodshed in western Sudan.
The agreement, which was reached after two years of hard talks
between the Sudanese government and the Sudanese Liberation Movement (SLM) under
the mediation of the African Union (AU), appeals for the disbandment of rebel
forces and the disarmament of the government-backed "janjaweed" militia.
At the signing ceremony held at the State House in the Nigerian
capital Abuja, Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo spoke highly of SLM leader
Minnie Minnawi, saying that he was "not just a military commander but also a
political leader."
The signing ceremony was delayed for three hours, as mediators tried
to persuade the smaller faction of the SLM to sign up to the deal.
However, SLM spokesman Seif Eldin Haruon said the group still has
concerns over whether the Sudanese government is ready to share power.
"We just need some few hours a week so we can sit down and talk to
our colleagues from the other parties, and I believe we will go forward," he
said.
The smallest rebel group the Justice and Equality Movement
(JEM)called for fundamental changes to the document. Its chief negotiator
reiterated the rebels' demands for the post of vice-president in the Khartoum
government and for Darfur to have a greater share of national wealth.
The rebel groups took up arms in Sudan's arid Darfur region in
February 2003, accusing the government of negligence. Many people have been
killed in the conflict and more displaced. Enditem |