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Progress reported at peace talks

[Sudan] First Vice President of Sudan, Ali Osman Mohamed Taha. IRIN
Sudanese Vice President Ali Osman Taha who negotiated a key deal with the SPLA
Make-or-break talks between Sudan's rebel leader, John Garang, and Vice President, Ali Osman Taha, aimed at breaking the deadlock in the Sudanese peace process are making progress, sources close to the negotiations told IRIN. The source said both sides were finalising the details of a security deal and that the Sudanese Minister of Defence, Maj Gen Bakri Hassan Salih, and other military personnel were expected to arrive soon in the Kenyan town of Naivasha, to take part in the negotiations. He said once a deal on security arrangements - for the six-and-a-half-year interim period following the signing of a comprehensive peace deal - was reached, things would "move forward". "If we agree on security we will not have problems with other areas," he said. Key security issues include the size, makeup and structure of a national army, whether the SPLA will be encorporated into that army or remain separate, and where the forces will be deployed. Preliminary discussions had also taken place about the three contested areas of Southern Blue Nile, Abyei and the Nuba mountains, as well as power-sharing arrangements but had not yielded any results, sources said. The peace process stalled in July when the government rejected a draft framework peace agreement, put forward by the IGAD negotiators, on the basis that it favoured the SPLM/A. Speaking last week to journalists, Garang said the rejection was "threatening the whole IGAD peace process with collapse". He said "we are going to Naivasha to save the process from collapsing, to resolve the deadlock."

This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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