Sudan government and rebel groups agree peace deal under UAE sponsorship
Sudanese leaders and rebel
commanders agreed Monday on a "historic" peace deal, a crucial step
towards ending 17 years of conflict in which hundreds of thousands of people
were killed.
Leaders of the Sudan
Revolutionary Front (SRF), an umbrella organisation of rebel groups from the
western region of Darfur and the southern states of South Kordofan and Blue
Nile, raised their fists in celebration after inking the agreement.
Fighting in Darfur alone
left around 300,000 people dead after rebels took up arms there in 2003,
according to the United Nations, with former government leaders accused of
carrying out genocide and of crimes against humanity.
Conflict in South Kordofan
and Blue Nile erupted in 2011, in the wake of South Sudan's independence,
resuming a war that had raged from 1983-2005.
"This is a truly
historic day," Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok said as he called on holdout
rebel groups to join the deal he said would build "peace and
stability" in Sudan.
Gibril Ibrahim, commander of
one of rebel groups, the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM), paid tribute to
all those killed or affected by the long years of violence.
"I congratulate all in
Sudan on reaching a historic, comprehensive peace that addressed the roots of
the problem and ended the war, God willing," Ibrahim said.
Sudanese paramilitary
commander Mohamed Hamdan Daglo -- best known by his nickname
"Hemeti", and who commanded fighters in the war -- signed the deal on
behalf of Khartoum.
Daglo and the leaders of the
rebel movements grouped together and shook hands at the ceremony in Juba, the capital
of neighbouring South Sudan.
But amid the celebrations
and messages of support, including from the United Nations and the Arab League,
there were also warnings there was also still a long way to go.
"We know that we are
going to face some problems when we start to move this (deal) from paper to the
ground... but we have that political will," said Faisal Mohammed Salih,
Sudan's information minister.
Jonas Horner, from the
International Crisis Group think thank, called the agreement a
"milestone" but said that implementation would be tough.
"It is a hugely
significant sign of progress for Sudan's transition," Horner said.
"But it is also far
from comprehensive, and only represents a first step towards peace, while
significant hurdles remain in the way of its implementation."
Rebels fought troops
deployed by now-toppled autocrat Omar al-Bashir, who is wanted by the
International Criminal Court (ICC) over charges of genocide and crimes against
humanity in the Darfur conflict.
Bashir, who is in jail in
Khartoum convicted of corruption, is now on trial for the 1989 coup in which he
grabbed power.
Sudan's transitional
authorities in February agreed Bashir should stand trial before the ICC.
Human rights groups say
Khartoum targeted suspected pro-rebel ethnic groups with a scorched earth
policy, raping, killing, looting and burning villages.
The deal was
"initialled" and not signed, as a way to leave the door open for two
key holdout rebel groups to join in a "final" agreement, officials
said.
Forging peace with rebels
has been a cornerstone of Sudan's transitional government, which came to power
in the months after the overthrow of Bashir in April 2019.
Sudan's rebels are largely
drawn from non-Arab minority groups that long railed against Arab domination of
the government in Khartoum under Bashir.
The agreement covers key
issues around security, land ownership, transitional justice, power sharing,
and the return of people who fled their homes because of fighting.
It also provides for the
dismantling of rebel forces and the integration of their fighters into the
national army.
Rebel members of the Sudan
Liberation Movement (SLM) and the Sudan People's Liberation Movement-North
(SPLM-N) had provisionally initialled the agreement with the government late on
Saturday.
Malik Agar, rebel chief of
the SPLM-N faction that agreed to the deal, called on his comrades still
fighting to lay down their arms.
"I announce from this
platform the end of the war," Agar said in a speech, calling on Nour and
Hilu to "not miss this historic opportunity".



