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Sudan Tribune

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JEM leader wants Darfur talks only with govt and a unified SLM

October 6, 2007 (KHARTOUM, Sudan) — A key Darfur rebel leader warned Saturday his movement will not attend peace talks this month in Libya unless the U.N. and the African Union can convince a rival group to unite its splinter factions.

Khalil_Ibrahim_JEM-3.jpgKhalil Ibrahim, leader of the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM), had said he would attend talks set to begin Oct. 27 in Tripoli, Libya, to end four years of bloodshed between rebels and the Sudanese government.

But Ibrahim said he would stay away from the talks unless the rival Sudan Liberation Army (SLA) united its multiple factions ahead of the talks.

“There must be only three sides in Tripoli: JEM, SLA, and the (Sudanese) government,” Ibrahim told The Associated Press by satellite phone from Darfur.

JEM’s participation is considered crucial to the success of the Tripoli talks because of the movement’s military power. U.N. mediators did not return calls for comment late Saturday, the end of the weekend in Sudan.

Ibrahim said U.N. and African Union mediators were lagging behind schedule in organizing the talks and determining what groups should attend. Ibrahim said is movement would not negotiate with multiple factions that have limited support.

“If the mediation fails to decide this very precisely, JEM will not come to Tripoli,” Ibrahim said. Instead, Ibrahim said his movement would negotiate its own agreement with the government without U.N. and African mediation.

A Darfur peace agreement reached in May 2006 failed to bring peace in large part because only one rebel chief, Minni Minawi, accepted it.

Minawi heads the main SLA faction but has lost much of his following since he signed the deal and became a high-ranking government official.

JEM claims to have thousands of troops in Darfur, but independent observers believe the number of regular, trained fighters is far fewer. The nearly a dozen SLA splinter groups collectively number more fighters.

But JEM has spearheaded rebel coalitions that have repeatedly defeated the Sudanese army in combat. In recent weeks, the movement claimed to have downed several government planes and helicopter gunships, and killed dozens of troops, countering a government offensive in eastern Darfur.

Observers in the area have largely confirmed these claims.

A second key Darfur rebel chief, Abdulwahid al-Nur, has also refused to attend the Tripoli talks.

Al-Nur says he will only negotiate once a planned force of 26,000 U.N. and AU peacekeepers arrives in Darfur to protect ethnic African civilians from the government’s Arab-dominated forces.

The current African Union force of 7,000 peacekeepers has been unable to end the violence and has itself become a target. Ten peacekeepers were killed in a suspected rebel attack on the base of Haskanita last week.

Rebel leaders blame each other, or rogue elements, for the attack, and say the African peacekeepers favor the government.

Al -Nur founded the SLA but is believed to have lost much control over the SLA splinters factions. Peace mediators say they will open the new talks without him.

But al-Nur’s role remains crucial, because he is believed to have the largest civilian following in Darfur. His tribe, the Fur, is the largest in the region to which it gave its name.

Several observers, including former U.S. President Jimmy Carter and South African Archbishop Desmond Tutu, have warned the Tripoli talks must represent Darfur civilians, not than just armed factions.

Ibrahim said he agreed that civilians must be represented, adding that his movement was organizing its own conference ahead of Tripoli to assemble delegations of refugees, women, and various other groups.

Fighting in Darfur is believed to have cost over 200,000 lives and made 2.5 million people refugees.

(AP)

1 Comment

  • DR RUBEN KOCH
    DR RUBEN KOCH

    JEM leader wants Darfur talks only with govt and a unified SLM
    It is wise to deal with terrorist organization according.

    What else do this Darfurian Rebel needs apart from peace?

    Honestly, rebel in Africa and Asia is something that has becomes fashionable in order to gain popularity around the world. It is also another short cut to political mainstream if somebody doesn’t have any other alternative solution of finding way to reach the beaches of political ministerial portfolio.

    This must be a chance to force JEM leader to attend the in coming peace talk or he may face the consequences of refusal as a result of him evoiliating the international proposal on peace process.

    Thanks

    Dr. RUBEN KOCH

    Reply
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