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Darfur: Sudan's unilateral move.


Byline: Arab News

(Category: Opinion)

Though it is welcome, the unilateral cease-fire in Darfur announced yesterday by the Sudanese administration of President Omar Hassan Bashir is understandably being treated with caution, since the war-torn region has found itself here before and past cease-fires have collapsed.

None of the various rebel groups has offered to match Bashir's move; nor indeed have any of the rebel factions said that they will attend peace talks that it is hoped will be convened in Qatar before the year is out. Yet in the difficult world of conflict resolution, the path to peace is laid piece by piece and the journey made step by step. Khartoum's move can be seen as a necessary precondition for a more nuanced and considered reaction by the rebels, now split into some 12 different militias. They will all now be coming under pressure from outside players, not least the government of Chad The Government of Chad has been controlled by Idriss Déby and his Patriotic Salvation Movement since December 2, 1990, and officially since February 28, 1991. An amendment to the Constitution of Chad, passed in 2005, allowed Déby to run for a third term. . Indeed it may be no coincidence that only three days ago the Chadian and Sudanese governments ended a six-month rift and normalized relations by once again exchanging ambassadors.

There are, however, some parts of Bashir's cease-fire declaration that should give pause for thought, because they smack of his administration's past reluctance to confront tough realities. Khartoum, for instance, still insists that the death total in this bitter conflict is around 10,000 when independent observers attest that up to 300,000 people have perished and 2.5 million have been made homeless. In particular his demand that the militias now be disarmed seems particularly ingenuous in·gen·u·ous  
adj.
1. Lacking in cunning, guile, or worldliness; artless.

2. Openly straightforward or frank; candid. See Synonyms at naive.

3. Obsolete Ingenious.
. If the Sudanese armed forces have found themselves unable to disarm the rebels by military means, the insurgents Insurgents, in U.S. history, the Republican Senators and Representatives who in 1909–10 rose against the Republican standpatters controlling Congress, to oppose the Payne-Aldrich tariff and the dictatorial power of House speaker Joseph G. Cannon.  are hardly likely to give up their weapons voluntarily at this juncture. Disarmament must indeed come but Bashir's call at this time is premature. The road to peace with the rebel South - his administration's outstanding achievement - did not begin with the SPLA SPLA Sudan People's Liberation Army
SPLA Secretory Phospholipase A
SPLA Service Provider License Agreement (Microsoft)
SPLA Southern Private Landlords Association (UK) 
 rebels laying down their arms before negotiations commenced. There is also the important question of the war crimes accusations leveled against Bashir by International Criminal Court chief prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo Luis Moreno-Ocampo (born 4 June 1952, Buenos Aires) is the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC). He is thus responsible for investigating and prosecuting war crimes crimes against humanity and genocide.  in July. No warrant has been issued for the president's arrest and both the Arab League Arab League, popular name for the League of Arab States, formed in 1945 in an attempt to give political expression to the Arab nations.  and the African Union African Union (AU), international organization established in 2002 by the nations of the former Organization of African Unity (OAU). The AU is the successor organization to the OAU, with greater powers to promote African economic, social, and political integration,  have now asked the United Nations to delay the move. It must be hoped that the UN will see how disruptive such a legal process would be to this latest nascent peace effort.

The two main rebel groups at least, the Sudan Liberation Army (SLA (1) (StereoLithography Apparatus) See 3D printing.

(2) (Service Level Agreement) A contract between the provider and the user that specifies the level of service expected during its term.
) and the Justice and Equality Movement The Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) is a rebel group involved in the Darfur conflict of Sudan. It is led by Khalil Ibrahim. Along with other rebel groups such as the Sudan Liberation Army, they are fighting against the government-supported Janjaweed militia.  (Jem) must now be persuaded to build on Bashir's cease-fire. It would not do for them to launch attacks designed to provoke the Sudanese Army into retaliation. Perhaps the president could make one significant confidence-building measure. He has spoken of disarming the rebels but the loyalist Janjweed militias, who have been responsible for much of the violence remain under arms. Now if Khartoum disarmed the Janjaweed, that would be a powerful signal.

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Publication:Arab News (Jeddah, Saudi Arabia)
Geographic Code:6SUDA
Date:Nov 15, 2008
Words:506
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