Oman Daily Observer

Sudan’s PM to join peace talks with rebels

Hamdok, in his first foreign visit, would join five members of the ruling sovereign council in Juba

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KHARTOUM: New Sudan Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok will head to South Sudan for peace talks between the ruling sovereign council and rebel leaders, the informatio­n minister said on Tuesday.

Faisal Saleh told reporters after the cabinet’s first meeting that Hamdok, in his first foreign visit, would join five members of the ruling sovereign council in the South Sudanese capital Juba on Thursday.

Sudan’s transition­al government has made peacemakin­g with rebels fighting Khartoum one of its main priorities as it is a key condition for the country’s removal from the United States’s sponsors of terrorism list.

Thousands of people have been killed in Sudan’s civil wars, including the conflict in the western Darfur region, where rebels have been fighting against then-president Omar Hassan al Bashir’s government since 2003.

Darfur’s war pits local rebel groups drawn largely from African farming tribes complainin­g about neglect against government forces in a conflict that has displaced about 2.5 million people.

The fighting in Darfur has subsided over the past four years where the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) and two factions of the Sudanese Liberation Army (SLA) are active, but skirmishes persist.

JEM leader Jibril Ibrahim as well as the SLA faction headed by Minni Minawi are present at the Juba talks while Abdel Wahid el Nur’s faction is absent, officials and rebel sources said.

Rebels of the Sudan People’s Liberation Army-north (SPLA-N) in South Kordofan and Blue Nile, two southern regions in Sudan, have largely committed to a ceasefire over the past two years. They have been fighting Khartoum’s rule since ending up on the Sudanese side of the border when South Sudan seceded in 2011.

Both factions, headed by Malik Agar and Abdelaziz al Hilu, are present at the talks.

South Kordofan and Blue Nile are home to large communitie­s who sided with the south during decades of civil war with Khartoum. Many say they have been marginalis­ed by the Khartoum government since South Sudan declared independen­ce in July under a 2005 peace deal.

Meanwhile, at least four cases of cholera have been confirmed in Sudan’s Blue Nile state and three people with acute watery diarrhoea have died, the Health Ministry said,

The ministry said it had identified 37 people with acute watery diarrhoea between August 28 and September 8 and that three of them have died. It was not immediatel­y clear when they died or if they had cholera.

Cholera can cause severe acute watery diarrhoea. The four cases of cholera identified were found when a ministry-run laboratory analysed six samples.

There are no official statistics on cholera in Sudan and the extent of its prevalence is unknown. But in 2017, Egypt’s Cairo airport began screening passengers arriving from Sudan for signs of the disease after a reported outbreak there.

Teams from the Health Ministry and the WHO travelled to Blue Nile state to support sanitation and water safety measures, disposal of waste and food safety, the ministry said in a statement.

 ?? — Reuters file photo ?? Sudan Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok.
— Reuters file photo Sudan Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok.

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