|
|
|
Nuba Vision Volume 2, Issue 2, January 2003 News: Sudan peace talks fail to get off the groundPeace talks between the rebel Sudan People’s Liberation Army (SPLA) and the Sudanese government failed to start as planned on 15 January in the Kenyan capital Nairobi, due to the absence of the delegation from Khartoum. Sudan’s delegation leader Ali Abdelrehman Nimeri told the meeting that his delegation was not in Nairobi, because they had not received an invitation to attend. The special session of peace talks between the Sudan
government and the SPLA But the regional Inter-Governmental Authority on Development
(IGAD) special "They were sent letters of invitation on December 17 and 23 detailing the agenda of the meetings and the programme of action, but they said they have never received any of them," SPLA spokesman Samson Kwaje said. "The SPLA is here with its full delegation, observers from Britain, America, Italy, Norway and also an UN representative. They cannot say that they did not get the invitation yet the IGAD mediators sent them." He pointed out. Mediators and SPLA representatives spent the morning at the talks venue waiting to see if a government delegation would come. Sudan’s ambassador to Kenya, Mohammed Dideri arrived just
before the scheduled opening of the meeting at 1200 GMT to read a statement.
"The very fact that the question of the three areas is now being projected
as the main subject of negotiations and also the very fact this meeting is being
held despite repeated representations from the government not to hold it are
proof enough that the atmosphere of trust is seriously deteriorating," the
statement said. "This has resulted in putting the government in an
unfortunate and rather awkward situation as if it were in defiance of the other
parties." The government said it wanted an immediate resumption of
the main talks Kwaje explained that the delegations were supposed to go back
to Machakos to talk about power- and wealth-sharing and security arrangements,
but it would Khartoum’s chief delegate Nimeri insisted that his
government was against convening a meeting on the three areas until after the
main IGAD talks on southern Sudan peace were finalised and had pleaded with the
mediators to hold Wednesday’s meeting. International mediators are now trying to reschedule the planned meeting, but it will be difficult to start detailed negotiations on sharing wealth and resources until the boundaries of the proposed new entities are established – the last thing that Khartoum is prepared to negotiate.
Arab Ministers Oppose Partition of Sudan
Arab ministers meeting in Khartoum expressed strong opposition to any partition of Sudan as part of the peace settlement currently being negotiated with the rebels and called on the United States to play a neutral role in the peace process. The position was stressed in a 14 January communiqué issued at the end of a two-day meeting of foreign ministers from the nine countries of the Arab League’s committee of support for Sudan. The statement said "Arab countries support the territorial unity of Sudan and oppose any attempt to carve it up." It expressed "support for efforts aimed at establishing overall peace and national understanding among all the sons of Sudan and of implementing a ceasefire throughout the country." It called on "all countries, particularly the United States, and organizations involved in the peace process in Sudan to play a positive, neutral and transparent role to help achieve peace." The communiqué also thanked Arab nations that had contributed to the fund for the reconstruction of Sudan – which is believed to stand at almost two billion dollars - and called on other members of the Arab League to also contribute to ensure the continued unity of the country. Chairing the meeting, Arab League Secretary General Amr Mussa, appealed to "all political forces in Sudan, in the north and in the south, to stop the war and establish peace."
Peter Moszynski
|
|
Nuba Survival |