Sudan reaches peace through Emirates
The government of Sudan and rebel groups in the western Darfur region initialed an historic peace agreement on August 31 under sponsorship from the United Arab Emirates.
The agreement is viewed as a successful political
move by the UAE. It will guarantee the integration of the rebel groups in
Darfur into regular security forces, among other measures.
Details
The agreement was signed in the South Sudanese
capital, Juba, and in the presence of the Head of Sudan's Sovereign Council
Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and Sudanese Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok.
It ends decades of fighting between the Sudanese
army and rebel groups in Darfur. Two of Darfur's rebel groups refused to sign the
agreement which ends 17 years of fighting.
Road to peace
Negotiations with rebels have always been a top
priority for the Sudanese interim government.
The government works to bring about peace in areas
full of tension under former Sudanese president Omar al-Bashir who ruled Sudan
for 30 years and was only deposed in April 2019.
The agreement makes the Blue Nile and South
Kordofan autonomous areas.
It distributes economic and financial resources
among the two regions. Sixty percent of these resources will be given to the
federal government of Sudan, whereas 40% will be given to local authorities in
the two regions.
The agreement also specifies 25% of cabinet and
legislative council seats for the two regions. It also specifies three seats
inside the Sovereign Council for the members of the Sudanese Revolutionary
Front.
The agreement extends the transitional period in
Sudan to 39 months as of the date of its signing, September 1.
The transitional period started in April 2019,
soon after the downfall of the Omar al-Bashir regime. It should have lasted for
39 months since that date.
The agreement gives the militias and militant
movement active in the two regions 39 months to integrate themselves into
regular security forces or disband themselves.



