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Sudan, Rebels Agree to Truce, Resume Talks: Mediators

Bashir, middle, with other IGAD Presidents

NAIROBI, October 4 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - The Sudanese government and southern rebels agreed to halt a civil war that started in 1983 and to resume talks to end it for good, mediators said in Nairobi Friday, October 4. They  explained that the truce and fresh talks would start on October 14.

"After consultations with the government of Sudan and the (rebel) Sudan People's Liberation Movement/Army (SPLM/A), both parties have agreed to resume negotiations starting on 14 October," read a statement released by the secretariat of the Inter-Governmental Authority on Development (IGAD), a grouping of regional states mediating in Sudan's peace process, according to Agence France-Presse (AFP).

"In order to create a conducive atmosphere for the talks, both parties have agreed to cease hostilities in all areas and ensure a military stand-down of all forces," the statement said.

It added that both parties have been invited to express their commitment to stop fighting and resume talking by signing a Memorandum of Understanding at the start of the talks in Nairobi on October 14.

"...The mediators call upon both parties to exercise maximum self-restraint and avoid any action which may jeopardize the resumption of talks," the statement said.

On September 2, The SPLA attacked and captured the southern Sudanese town of Torit, forcing Khartoum to pull its delegation out of a second round of peace talks in Kenya.


An initial round of talks in Kenya ended in July with signing an agreement under which the south will enjoy six years of self-rule, before deciding in a referendum whether it wants to secede or remain part of Sudan.


The next round of talks will focus on sharing power and resources, notably the revenue from oil reserves. Human rights and a fully-fledged ceasefire are also on the agenda.

On Wednesday, October 2, the Sudanese government denied southern rebels’ claim that said they had cut off oil supplies to Khartoum.

“A commando unit of the 20th brigade ... penetrated the oil collection and production complex in Heglig and destroyed the main station,” said the Sudan People’s Liberation Army (SPLA) in a statement.

The rebel organization said it suffered no casualties “despite attacks by the helicopter gun ships of the regime” of President Omar al-Beshir.

“Oil supply to Khartoum has been cut off” as a result of the operation carried out early Monday, September 30, SPLA spokesman Yasir Arman told AFP.

The Heglig oilfield accounts for the bulk of Sudan’s oil production running currently at around 240,000 barrels per day (bpd). It came on stream in August 1999, making Sudan an oil-exporting country.

A Sudanese army spokesman, quoted by the official news agency SUNA, dismissed the SPLA statement as “lies” and part of “the psychological warfare against our people and the armed forces.”

“The rebel Yasir Arman is continuing to spread lies, the latest being about the destruction of the main field in Heglig,” he said, reacting several hours after the SPLA report.


The war considerably escalated in September.


On September 27, Khartoum closed its air space in the south for nine days, leading to the suspension of all humanitarian flights there.


In Geneva, the UN World Food Program (WFP) said that this move put about half a million people at risk of starvation.


WFP spokeswoman Christiane Berthiaume said that, normally, 25 flights a day took off from Lokichokio in northern Kenya, heading across the border with food supplies, but the ban meant that since September 27 there had been only four, to evacuate staff.


In all, almost 2,800 tons of food supplies had not been delivered to affected southern provinces, Berthiaume said.

 

On Thursday, October 3, Kenyan General Lazaro Sumbeiywo, the chief mediator, delivered a message from Kenyan President Daniel arap Moi to his Sudanese counterpart Omar al-Beshir.

 

The message contained proposals for resuming peace talks.


Khartoum demanded a nationwide ceasefire as its price for going back to Machakos, but the SPLA said it will only halt attacks when the talks resume and for as long as they last.

 

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