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Sudan Tribune

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US diplomat finds mediation between Darfur factions difficult

Nov 8, 2005 (NAIROBI) — Leaders of a divided Darfur rebel group briefly walked out of a meeting with a top U.S. envoy Monday, giving him an object lesson in the challenges he faces as he tries to shore up peace efforts in Sudan.

Robert_Zoellick_news_conference.jpgThe U.S. State Department’s No. 2 official Robert Zoellick had called the meeting to try to unite the factions within the Sudan Liberation Movement, the largest rebel group in Sudan’s western Darfur region. The split within the rebel movement has undermined peace talks with the government and sparked more fighting in Darfur.

At a meeting last week in Darfur, a faction led by Minni Minnawi claimed control of the movement. But Abdelwahed al-Nur boycotted that meeting and appears to still consider himself the group’s leader.

Nur was the first to arrive Tuesday for talks with Zoellick. He was later joined in a conference room at a luxury hotel by a deputy sent by Minnawi. But when Zoellick arrived, both Darfur factions walked out.

Saif Haroun, a spokesman for Minnawi, said the Nur faction wanted equal footing with the Minnawi faction during the talks with Zoellick.

“They can join the talks as members of the SLM, but they cannot claim to be leaders at all,” Haroun said.

Zoellick’s aides eventually persuaded both factions to return to the conference room, but it was not clear under what conditions.

“The peace has been very fragile and violence has increased over the course of the past few weeks,” Zoellick said late Monday, on the flight to Kenya.

He said that this violence may be related to power struggles within the Sudan Liberation Movement, also known as the Sudan Liberation Army.

“That violence risks unraveling the very fragile situation in Darfur,” Zoellick said. “We have got to regain the moment by getting the people to respect the cease-fire, come up with a coherent negotiating position and when negotiations resume on Nov. 20 to get the rebels and the government of national unity to make more progress on the peace accord because fighting and killing will not provide a solution.”

The African Union and Chad have been co-mediating peace talks to end the Darfur conflict, with the last session ending on Oct. 20 in the Nigerian capital, Abuja. The parleys are set to resume later this month.

After decades of clashes over land and water in Darfur that often pitted the region’s ethnic Arab tribes against its ethnic African tribes, conflict erupted on a wider scale in February 2003. Then, the Sudan Liberation Movement and the other major rebel group, Justice and Equality Movement, took up arms against the Sudanese government amid accusations of repression and unfair distribution of wealth.

The central government is accused of responding by unleashing ethnic Arab tribal militias known as Janjaweed to murder and rape civilians and lay waste to villages. The Sudanese government denies backing the Janjaweed.

The United Nations estimates that 180,000 people have died, mainly through famine and disease. No firm figures exist on the number killed in fighting. Several million more have either fled into neighboring Chad or been displaced inside Sudan.

(AP/ST)

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