Jump to navigation

Sudan

After UN speech, army leader Burhan hints at peace talks

Questions on the legitimacy of Sudan's junta leaders abound as their six month war devastates the country

Suggestions by Sudan Armed Forces commander, General Abdel Fattah al Burhan that he is willing to open negotiations with his rival Gen Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo 'Hemeti', head of the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) militia offers a chance to negotiate a ceasefire but lacked any clear plan to structure the talks. Making the comment after his speech to the UN General Assembly in which he called for Hemeti's RSF to be designated as a terrorist organisation, Burhan seemed more interested in clawing back some diplomatic standing.

Burhan told the BBC that he would open talks with Hemeti provided that the RSF agrees not to target civilians. The two sides have been reduced to a war of attrition. Hemeti's RSF retains control of most of the capital Khartoum and central Sudan. Some of the deadliest fighting is in Darfur where the RSF is accused of running an 'ethnic cleansing' campaign, repeating the tactics of the National Islamic Front's genocide two decades ago. Burhan's SAF controls Port Sudan and most of the rest of the country (Dispatches 20/9/23. Political movement warns of civil war).

Peace talks led by Saudi Arabia and the United States have failed to make significant progress, in part because Burhan and the SAF view themselves as representing the legitimate government and Hemeti's RSF as a rebel militia. Hemeti has some support among regional leaders, such as Kenya's William Ruto.

Having escaped from Khartoum and under fire from RSF, Burhan has stepped up his own diplomatic outreach efforts in recent weeks, meeting with Egypt's President Abdel Fattah el Sisi. Speaking to the UN General Assembly on 21 September, Burhan called for the RSF to be designated as a terrorist organisation.

'This war is a threat to regional and international peace and security as those rebels have sought the support of outlaws and terrorist groups,' said Burhan. He also warned it could spill over to other countries in the region.



Related Articles

DISPATCHES

Political movement warns of civil war

The opposition FFC urges regional leaders to step up efforts to broker a ceasefire as the battle of attrition increases the prospect of the country's partition

The warning by the civilian political movement, the Forces for Freedom and Change (FFC), that the formation of rival governments by warring militia groups could lead to Sudan's...

READ FOR FREE

Delusions of peace

Egypt and Libya intervene to block southern and northern opposition hopes while the NIF plays off everyone against each other

'Egypt possesses cards it has not yet used for preventing the separation of southern Sudan'. Thus spake Cairo's Ambassador to Khartoum, Mohamed Asim Ibrahim, in June 2000. Egypt...


Southern leaders compete for a new state

There are fears that the thrice-delayed national elections, now due on 8 April, could trigger an escalation of fighting in Darfur and the South, given the probability that few will accept the results as free and fair. The Khartoum regime has failed to implement most of the key democratic reforms agreed under the 2005 peace deal. The 2008 census and the constituency boundaries lacked credibility and the Islamist government has done nothing to promote an independent judiciary or independent electoral administration.

referendumA new wave of violence and fraudulent elections could block any chance of progress on Darfur and undermine the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM) led by Salva Kiir...


New politics, new threats

Three new developments will shape Sudan's politics this year: the International Criminal Court's (ICC) issue of an arrest warrant for President Omer Hassan Ahmed el Beshir; the planned elections under the Comprehensive Peace Agreement; and the inauguration of President Barack Obama's government in the United States with a clear commitment to act against Khartoum's mass murder in Darfur.

New politics, new threats The ruling National Congress (NC, aka National Islamic Front) is struggling to adapt to new realities. A dozen years of meticulous planning and patient...


Tragic contradictions

UN Secretary General Kofi Annan, who on the anniversary of the start of Rwanda's genocide raised the possibility of military intervention in Darfur, has been trying to galvanise...