Sudan warns United States it will reject any new initiative for peace in Darfur
Article Comments (2)  Email PrintSave
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

August 13, 2011 (KHARTOUM) — The Sudanese government said it would
reject any American initiative aiming to hold new negotiations with
the rebel groups to end the eight year conflict in Darfur.


Amin Hassan Omer (ST/file) US Senior Advisor for Darfur, Dane Smith,
said his government would invite Sudanese government, Darfur rebels
and international partners to meet in Washington next September. He
pointed out that the reunion aims mainly to consider the way forward
after the signing of a peace agreement between Khartoum and the
Liberation and Equality Movement (LJM). But he ruled out they would
come with any initiative.

The gathering will include the Justice and Equality Movement which
asks to open the Doha peace document adopted last May for
negotiations, the Sudan Liberation Movement (SLM) of Abdel Wahid
Al-Nur which boycotts the Doha process and the SLM- Minni Minnawi who
signed the Abuja peace agreement in 2006 but renounced it this year.

The former rebel LJM also will attend the meeting as the
implementation of the Doha peace agreement will also be debated in
Washington.

"If the Washington meeting aims to launch a new initiative we say
there is no room for any new initiative to replace the Doha imitative
which is sponsored by the State of Qatar and supported by the African
Union and United Nations," said Khartoum’s chief negotiator Amin
Hassan Omer.

Amin who was speaking to Alray Alaam daily also said Washington did
not inform them officially about the meeting.

Sudan’s foreign ministry spokesperson Al-Obaid Marawih echoed Amin’s
statements saying that Washington will commit a "big mistake" if it
supports rebels’ demand to open new talks

"The US Administration would be committing a big mistake because it
will not only be an insult to the Sudan, but also to those who
supported the Doha agreement," he further stressed.

The Sudanese official was alluding to the African Union, Arab League
and United Nations which officially brought their support to the Doha
peace framework document and urged the Sudanese parties to engage
talks for a lasting peace in western Sudan.

The framework document is supposed to outline the features of peace
agreements between the government and rebel groups in a way that the
content of different deals be more or less similar even if they are
negotiated separately.

During the Doha stakeholders conference, the US special envoy
Princeton Lyman and the Senior Adviser for Darfur, Dane Smith approved
the Doha peace document but stressed that it should be a basis for
further negotiations between the government and the rebel groups.

The then Joint Chief Mediator, Djibril Bassolé, proposed the idea of a
framework document as basis for separate peace agreements between the
government and rebel groups, after failing to persuade the rebel
groups to unite under common grounds before to negotiate with the
government.

He also insisted on the need for a comprehensive and inclusive process
to bring a lasting peace in Darfur. Bassole also was very critical to
a parallel initiative aiming to include Darfur displaced, civil
society and tribal leaders called Darfur Political Process because it
excludes the rebel groups.

However, Khartoum said the Doha peace document should be not be
amended and propose to the rebel groups to only discuss the political
participation in the national and regional institutions and the
security arrangements including the absorption of their fighters in
the regular army.

(ST)

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "JFD 
info" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected].
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/jfdinfo?hl=en.

Reply via email to