Sudan's former foes remain divided after talks - official

Fri Jul 17, 2009 8:52am GMT
 

By Andrew Heavens

KHARTOUM (Reuters) - Former foes from Sudan's north-south civil war have agreed on measures to prevent clashes over a contested oil area, but remain divided on other disputes after two days of talks, one of the parties said on Friday.

Political tensions are rising in Sudan in the build up to a decision by the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague next week on the boundaries of Abyei, a central Sudanese region close to oil fields claimed by both the north and the south.

Abyei's borders were among a number of divisive issues left unresolved in a 2005 peace deal that ended more than two decades of civil war between Sudan's government and the south's dominant Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM).

Forces from both sides have clashed in Abyei since the agreement and analysts have warned remaining disputes between the two sides could still drag the region back to conflict if left unresolved.

Any return to civil war would have a devastating impact on the surrounding region, Sudan itself and the country's oil industry.

Leaders from the two sides met in Khartoum on Wednesday and Thursday to try and hammer out their remaining differences in a summit brokered by U.S. Sudan envoy Scott Gration.

SPLM delegation leader Malik Agar told Reuters the sides had agreed to a package of measures to try and maintain calm in Abyei after The Hague ruling, expected on July 22.

"Once the decision is made in The Hague, one side is going to feel disappointed. We need to avoid any violence," he added. "The measures are really an elaboration of what we have already agreed. There was no big progress in the meetings."

He said the parties had agreed to an increase in the number of U.N. peacekeepers in Abyei and would send their own high- ranking delegations to the town on the day to try and ease tensions.

Both sides also repeated a promise to accept the Hague court's ruling whichever way it fell. No one was immediately available to comment on the meeting from the northern delegation, led by presidential advisor Ghazi Salaheddin.

Agar said the parties had so far made little progress in resolving a string of other disputes, including preparations for national elections, a disputed census and a raft of laws seen as central to the peace deal.

The north-south talks are due to continue on Sunday and Monday after Gration returns from a two-day visit to Sudan's strife-torn Darfur region.

Two million people died and 4 million fled their homes between 1983 and 2005 as north and south Sudan battled out differences in ideology, ethnicity and religion.

The 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement shared oil revenues between the north and south, set up a coalition government and promised elections, now scheduled for April 2010, and a referendum on southern independence in January 2011.

(Editing by Giles Elgood)

Photo
Uganda gays feel threatened by bill

Being gay or lesbian in Uganda is illegal and those who are risk being locked away for up to 14 years. Now, a new parliamentary bill wants gay people to face even stiffer penalties and is proposing life imprisonment and even death sentences in some cases...  Blog 

 
Photo
Ethiopian plane crash should not sully success story

When news of the Ethiopian Airlines plane crash broke this morning my heart sank at the thought of covering yet another negative story about Ethiopia.  Blog 

 
Photo
How will Chinese culture influence Africa?

So far, media coverage of China’s involvement in Africa has mostly been about investment. Stories of Chinese engineers in hard hats standing by roads up mountains in Ethiopia. Stories of Chinese farmers moving to Zambia.   Blog 

 
Photo
The unnumbered dead

The simple answer to the question of how many people died in Congo’s civil war is “too many”.  Blog 

 
Photo
Guinea tests Western influence in Africa

Whether Guinea’s absent junta leader Moussa Dadis Camara makes it back to his home country or not will be the latest test of Western powers’ dwindling influence in Africa.  Blog 

 
Photo
Africa-Asia ties flying high

Investment from China and other Asian countries was an important factor in several years of unprecedented growth in Africa before the global downturn hit.  Blog 

 
Powered by Reuters AlertNet. AlertNet provides news, images and insight from the world's disasters and conflicts and is brought to you by Reuters Foundation.