Last update - 01:33 16/02/2009
Darfur rebel leader visited Israel

By Amos Harel and Barak Ravid

The leader of one of the rebel groups in Sudan's Darfur region recently visited 
Israel to discuss with a senior Israeli official the situation in Sudan.

Abdel Wahid al-Nur is the head of the Sudan Liberation Movement. While in 
Israel, he met with the senior official and discussed with him the ongoing 
conflict in Sudan.

Al-Nur came to Israel earlier this month at his own initiative, to attend the 
annual Herzliya Conference. He came with a group of European Jews, most of them 
French, who have been active on behalf of the Darfur refugees. He did not speak 
at any of the sessions, but did observe several.

At the conference, he was introduced to the senior official, and the two 
arranged a meeting, which took place a few days later.

The Defense Ministry responded, "In the interests of national security, various 
and sundry meetings are held. We are not in the habit of giving responses after 
each of these meetings."

The Sudan Liberation Movement was founded in 1992. It is a secular group that 
opposes the Islamist regime of Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir, and its 
official stated goal is to turn Sudan into a democracy that grants equal rights 
to all its citizens. However, it also has a military wing that has been 
fighting government forces in Darfur since 2001.

Close ties

Al-Nur fled to France in 2007 and has not been back to Sudan since then. He has 
won support from international human rights organizations and is considered 
very close to French Jewish philosopher Bernard-Henri Levy.

In the past, he has spoken in favor of establishing diplomatic ties between 
Sudan and Israel, and a year ago, he even announced that his movement was 
opening an office in Tel Aviv, staffed by Sudanese refugees who found asylum in 
Israel after fleeing the massacres committed by Bashir's forces in Darfur.

However, this was his first visit here.

Israel currently has more than 600 Darfur refugees, and Ehud Olmert's 
government decided to grant them all asylum and work permits. This decision was 
made in part because Bashir's government announced that any Sudanese refugee 
who set foot in Israel would be considered a "Mossad agent" and would therefore 
be sentenced to death should he or she ever return to Sudan.
 
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1064417.html


      

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