TEXT- Darfur Peace Agreement: A just peace or peace at all costs?
Saturday 29 April 2006 21:07.
By John A. Akec*

April 38, 2006 (LONDON) — The government of Sudan and Darfur armed
Movements have been given 48 hours ending Friday night to present
opinion on a draft Darfur Peace Agreement proposed by African Union
mediators after more than two years of grilling negotiations. If
signed, it will put an end to a devastating war that broke out in
January 2002 and which has claimed more than 300,000 lives and
displaced 1.5 million people from their homes.

SENIOR ASSISTANT TO THE PRESIDENT

The agreement offers Darfur Movements a position of Senior Assistant
to the President in the Government of National Unity (GONU), who will
be the fourth highest-ranking official in the government and will
exercise wide powers and political influence. SLA/M and JEM will
nominate 3 persons among whom the President will choose a Senior
Assistant. An Advisor to the President from Darfur will also be
appointed by the Senior Assistant to the President.

TRANSITIONAL DARFUR REGIONAL AUTHORITY

According to the Draft Peace Agreement seen by this author, a
Transitional Darfur Regional Authority (TDRA) will be set up that will
be charged with responsibility of implementing Darfur Peace Agreement
(DPA), supervising reconstruction and economic development, and
helping in return and resettlement of the refugees. It will consist
mainly of the Senior Assistant to the President, the Governors of the
three Darfur States, Heads of the Darfur Rehabilitation and
Resettlement Commission, Darfur Reconstruction and Development Fund,
Darfur Land Commission, Darfur Security Commission, and Darfur Peace
and Reconciliation Council. SLA/M and JEM will have representatives in
TDRA. Also, a nominee of SLA/M and JEM will be governor of one of 3
Darfur States, in addition to 2 cabinet ministers and 1 advisor to the
governor in each of the 3 states. The Senior Assistant to the
President will head Transitional Darfur Regional Authority (TDA)

REPRESENTATION IN THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT

Darfur Movements will also have three state ministers in the federal
government, one cabinet minister in the executive of Khartoum State,
in addition of four cabinet ministers already held by Darfurians in
the government of national unity. The Darfur Movements will also
occupy 12 seats in the National Legislative Assembly .

WEALTH SHARING

In wealth sharing, the share of Darfur will be worked out by a new
body called Fiscal and Financial Allocation and Monitoring Commission
(FFAMC) that will be formed as part of this agreement. FFAMC will be
an independent body that will make recommendations about the formula
to be used for funds allocations to the President and the National
Legislative Assembly. A Panel of Experts aid FFAMC in its work.
Members of the Panel will be nominated by FFAMC and approved by the
National Legislative Assembly. Darfur will be appropriately
represented. Mechanisms have been deigned into FFAMC in order to
protect its independence against government interference.

To speed up reconstruction process of the war ravaged region, Darfur
will receive a payment of US$ 300 million from the National Account
Fund in 2006, and another two consecutive payments of US$ 200 million
in 2007 and 2008. This is in addition to its allocation from National
Account as will be determined by the FFAMC.

ONE DARFUR REFERUNDUM

There will be a referundum by July 2010 at the latest in which
Darfurians will decide between the amalgamation of current three
Darfur States into one administrative unit called Darfur Region, or
retaining the status quo of three self-governing Darfur States with no
Region. There will also be a boundary commission to delinate Darfur's
North-South boundary as of first of January 1956.

REBELS DISARMED, DEMOBILISED, OR REDEPLOYED

The SLM/A and JEM combatants will be disarmed, demobilised, or
redeployed. Those qualified and competent will be integrated into
Sudan Armed Forces. The agreement calls for fair representation of
Darfurians at all levels of Sudan Armed Forces and security organs.
The combatants who will be integrated into Sudan Armed Forces will not
be transferred away from Darfur region in the next 5 years and are
protected from being laid off by any new redundancy plans in the armed
forces over that same period. The government of Sudan will also be
required to downsize its forces in Darfur and in border with Chad. The
process will be heavily monitored and policed by Security Commission
through African Union Mission in Sudan (AMIS).

Since April 2004, the government of Sudan has been negotiating with
Sudan Liberation Movement/Army and Justice and Equality Movement to
bring a peaceful end to war in Darfur. In March 2006, the UN and
African Union peace mediators gave Darfur warring parties a deadline
to reach an agreement by 30th April 2006. On Tuesday 25th April 2006,
the AU's chief mediator, Salim Ahmed Salim, presented to the
government of Sudan, and the Darfur Movements with a draft peace
agreement which he described as 'balanced and fair" to all the
parties. All the parties were given 48 hours to respond to AU draft
proposals.

Both the SLM/A and JEM demanded for the position of vice president
(currently held by Ali Osman Taha), the governorship of Khartoum
State, 8 federal cabinet ministers, and a single Darfur State (or
region) instead of the current 3 unconnected but self-governing
states. In addition, SLA and JEM are demanding compensation for each
individual who suffered loss in the war.

On its part, the NCP dominated government of Sudan is ready to make
concessions without compromising its 52 percent majority in the
National Assembly, and the post of vice president, and argues that
administering Darfur as 3 states will bring power closer to people.

One glaring problem with this agreement is that SLA/M and JEM combined
will still lack the majority to decidedly influence policies in the 3
Darfur States to achieve their goals for taking up arms. Hence, while
Darfur Movements will be represented in the government, they cannot
dictate the terms to the current Darfur states administration that was
installed by the government of Sudan. This situation is unlike that of
the Government of Southern Sudan where 70 percent of the executive and
Legislative Assembly, and executive and legislative of branches of 10
Southern States, are held by the SPLM.

Furthermore, the agreement talks about what will be done and how it
will be done. It does not give specific numbers or targets or how much
is good enough. This is a great weakness as it leaves much to be
decided in future. It is potential minefield for conflict, greed, and
dishonesty. In order to succeed, the implementation of the agreement
will demand very close involvement of the international partners and
third parties to verify, interpret, or arbitrate disputes.

In fact, this agreement with its dependence on third parties to
monitor compliance with terms of the agreement, it will open up Sudan
to the greatest international community ever.

Sudan government is optimistic that a deal will be struck on Sunday 30
April 2006, which is the deadline set by the UN to warring parties in
Darfur to reach an agreement. SLA/M leader Abdalwaheed Al-Nur said
that it would be impossible to sign the draft agreement as it leaves
out much of Movements demands, specially that related to the position
of the vice president. As of Friday night, JEM was yet to send their
comments on the draft agreement to the AU mediators.

Implemented correctly, the agreement can bring justice and peace. And
without spelling out how much is just, it leaves the agreement hanging
on the good faith of the government of Sudan and the willingness of
the international community to closely get involved. And that is a
minefield.

It should go without saying that much energy has been injected into
the negotiating process since the vice president Ali Osman Taha joined
the Abuja peace talks earlier this month. The miracle maker that he
is, there could still be many surprises in the pipeline that could
dramatically change the situation between now and Sunday, 30 April 06.



* Sudanese Political Analyst based in
London.http://johnakecsouthsudan.blogspot.com/



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