Sudan agrees to stop Darfur fighting

Sudan said today it would immediately and unconditionally cease hostilities in its remote Darfur region, and asked the United…

Sudan said today it would immediately and unconditionally cease hostilities in its remote Darfur region, and asked the United Nations and African Union to request that rebel forces do the same.

Foreign Minister Mustafa Osman Ismail, speaking after an emergency meeting with Western diplomats, UN and African Union officials, said they did not however discuss withdrawing troops from towns the government has captured from rebels.

"Yes, we will inform our forces in Darfur immediately to stop any fighting, so we will not fire unless we will be attacked by the other side," the minister told reporters.

The African Union had given Sudan a 24-hour deadline, which expired yesterday evening, to stop hostilities or it would refer the matter to the UN Security Council. But the fighting had continued this morning.

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Mr Ismail said the government had obeyed the AU deadline but rebels had attacked again, forcing the army to retaliate and chase them into Labado town, about 40 miles east of Nyala, capital of South Darfur state. The army now holds Labado.

A rebel delegate at faltering peace talks in the Nigerian capital Abuja said Khartoum's pledge should not be taken seriously yet because the government has made similar promises in the past week, but failed to keep them.

"Their words do not match their deeds. If they are serious let them stop the offensive. They don't honour their words, we will not accept mere words, we want action this time," Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) spokesman Mr Ahmed Adam said.

The peace talks in Abuja failed to begin in earnest because fierce fighting broke out between rebels and the government in South Darfur state last week. Mr Ismail said the government was ready to withdraw from areas they had won from the rebels during fighting since a much-violated ceasefire was signed in April, but only if the rebels agreed to reciprocate.

Mr Abdel Wahed Muhamed al-Nur, leader of the second main rebel group the Sudan Liberation Army (SLA) said he would only go to the Abuja talks if government troops withdrew from all the areas they took in the past ten days as soon as possible.

The rebel leadership had boycotted the talks because of the military operations in Darfur.

The African Union has been mediating between the two sides in Abuja and has more than 800 truce observers in Darfur. Referral to the Security Council would raise the stakes in the truce monitoring procedure, which most of the parties have tried to leave to the African Union.

The rebels have said they want international intervention and forces in Darfur to monitor the shaky ceasefire.

The two main rebel movements took up arms in early 2003 in protest at what they called political marginalisation of the region and harassment of African villages by Arab militias. The conflict has displaced over 1.6 million people in Darfur. Tens of thousands have been killed.

The rebels blame much of the violence on Arab militias known as Janjaweed and say they have operated with help from the army. The government says it did recruit militias as auxiliaries but has nothing to do with the Janjaweed, which it calls outlaws.