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Sudan-US talks to resume next week after brief delay

May 24, 2008 (KHARTOUM) —A delegation led by the US special envoy to Sudan Richard Williamson will travel to Khartoum next week for the second round of negotiations on normalizing ties, a Sudanese official said today.

The spokesman of the Sudanese foreign ministry Ali Al-Sadek told the official news agency (SUNA) that Williamson will arrive in Khartoum next Friday to meet with government officials.

However the Sudanese official did not provide a detailed itinerary of Williamson’s scheduled meetings.

Al-Sadek said that both sides will discuss the situation in Darfur, Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) and the bilateral relations.

The talks were scheduled for this week but were delayed for unknown reasons. However the head of US affairs in the Sudanese foreign ministry Abdel-Basit Al-Sanoosi told SUNA that the postponement was due to the attack by Darfur Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) on the capital May 10th.

Al-Sanoosi said that the JEM attack will be on the agenda and that Khartoum intends to demonstrate to Washington “that this is a violation of international law and the charters of regional and international organizations which push JEM into the label of a terrorist group”.

But a US official speaking to Sudan Tribune last week said that Washington has “many criteria” that it uses before determining if a group should make it to the list of terrorists organizations.

Williamson met with in Rome last April with a Sudanese delegation headed by Sudan Nafi and included Sudan’s spy chief Salah Gosh as well as foreign minister Deng Alor.

News of the meeting drew widespread in the US from lawmakers and Darfur advocates who think that the Sudanese government has not lived up to its previous commitments with regards to Darfur and partially to the North-South agreement.

Democratic White House contender Barack Obama issued a statement saying he was “deeply concerned” over reports that the Bush administration is negotiating with Sudan over normalizing ties.

The New York Times (NYT) obtained a series of documents exchanged between Washington and Khartoum on a series of steps to normalize relations between the two countries. The documents were leaked by an unidentified US official described as being “critical of the administration’s position”.

The report said that the Bush administration could remove Sudan from an American list of state supporters of terrorism and normalize relations if the Sudanese government agreed, among other steps, to allow Thai and Nepalese peacekeepers as part of the peacekeeping force.

However Williamson told US lawmakers that the report is “not accurate” and that if it was “he would not defend it and would not engage in it”. He further said that it was the Sudanese government which approached Washington on the requirements for normalizing ties.

“Concrete, verifiable, significant progress must be achieved on the ground before we can contemplate improved relations” Williamson said.

Williamson told a group of Darfur activists in a conference call sponsored by Enough Project from Washington that he does not foresee improvement of ties with Sudan “during his tenure”.

“There has to be changes on the ground before any improvement in relations” the US envoy said.

He further said that tougher sanctions remain an option on the table if the US president Bush deems them necessary.

But following the Rome negotiations the Sudanese government decided to release containers belonging to the US embassy that was being held by custom authorities in Port Sudan for over a year.

The containers contained equipments that were to be used for new embassy complex in south Khartoum that was under construction for over two years.

The daily Al-Sharq Al-Awsat quoting unidentified Sudanese official said that the US administration agreed to “re-open a bank account for the Sudanese embassy in Washington” in return.

Earlier this month Washington also released a number of Sudanese inmates held at the U.S. military prison in Guantanamo Bay.

(ST)

2 Comments

  • Duop Chak
    Duop Chak

    Sudan-US talks to resume next week after brief delay
    Sudan-US talks is nothing but failed policy.

    Reply
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