Darfur peace plan signed by one rebel group
Two others refuse; U.N. chief says force may be needed to protect civilians
![]() | Members of a faction within the Sudan Liberation Army walk out of peace talks Friday in Abuja, Nigeria. |
George Osodi / AP |
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ABUJA, Nigeria - Sudan's government and the main Darfur rebel group signed a peace plan Friday, marking major progress in an internationally backed effort to end the death and destruction in western Sudan.
Two rebel groups, though, rejected the accord backed by the African Union, United States, Britain, the European Union and the Arab League and skipped the signing ceremony in a hall at a Nigerian presidential villa. Optimism was muted by that and a history of failure to live up to agreements struck over two years of negotiations in the Nigerian capital.
In New York, U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan urged all countries to press the warring parties to reach agreement but warned the international community has an obligation to protect civilians in Darfur, by force if need be, to end a conflict that has claimed at least 180,000 lives.
The small Justice and Equality Movement was the first to walk out overnight. Abdel Wahid Nur, of a faction of the main rebel Sudan Liberation Army, followed before dawn Friday saying: “We are not going to sign.”
But another faction, led by Nur’s rival Minni Minnawi, agreed to sign despite reservations believed linked to rejected rebel demands for Sudan to have a vice president from Darfur, said AU spokesman Noureddine Mezni. The issue of the vice presidency was believed the main reason the other factions had rejected a deal.
Mezni also said the Minnawi faction was willing to resume direct talks with the government; the parties have been negotiating through intermediaries in recent days.
All-night session
Days of negotiations culminated in an all-night session with the African Union, rebels and envoys from the United States, Britain, the European Union and the Arab League. Deadlines have been extended twice since Sunday and Thursday’s session went five hours beyond the midnight time limit.
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Sudan’s government was not involved because it already had agreed to the initial proposal drafted by AU mediators, and negotiators were waiting for the rebels to agree.
“These are all opportunities, but it requires leadership on the part of the movement that, frankly, is in question,” U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Robert Zoellick told reporters.
The last-ditch diplomatic efforts appeared doomed to failure, but Denis Sassou-Nguesso, president of the Republic of Congo and current head of the 53-nation African Union, said “It has not yet ended.”
Annan: Force may be necessary
Annan reminded world leaders that at September’s U.N. World Summit they had agreed that if a state could not protect its citizens — or was the perpetrator of violence — “the international community, through the (Security) Council, has to take action, and, if need by, by force.” He spoke in an interview on “The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer” on PBS television.
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The time had come to redeem that pledge, said Annan. The United States has accused Sudan’s government of genocide in Darfur, while the U.N. has called the conflict the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.
The Darfur rebels earlier had cautiously welcomed U.S.-drafted proposals to salvage the peace agreement.
Four pages of last-ditch revisions to the 85-page peace plan drawn up by African Union mediators offered concessions to the rebels on integrating fighters into the Sudan armed forces, compensation for war victims and power-sharing.
But as the session went well beyond the deadline, it became clear the rebels were unhappy.
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