Play 23 different addictive eWoss Games. It's FREE! Win money!
eWoss News
Home  News  Sports  Games
   
Welcome Guest
   Sign Up | Sign In
World News
Middle East News
European News
Canadian News
Latin American News
Asian News
Australian & Pacific News
African News

eWoss News
Breaking News Headlines
Top News Stories
U.S. National News
World News
Sports News
Business News
Entertainment News
Tech Industry News
Political News
Science News
Health News
Weird News

eWoss NewsBar
Free News Headlines Embedded in Your Browser

eWoss Sports
eWoss Sports Home
NFL
NBA
NCAA Football
College Hoops
NHL
MLB

African News

Government, Main Rebels Sign Peace Accord

Friday, May 05, 2006 9:49:35 PM
By MICHELLE FAUL

An unidentified member of the main rebel Sudan Liberation Army (SLA), reacts before they walk out of the peace talks meeting in Abuja, Nigeria, Friday, May 5v 2006. Sudan's government and the main Darfur rebel group signed a peace plan Friday, marking major progress in an internationally backed effort to end the death and destruction in western Sudan. Two rebel groups, though, rejected the accord backed by the African Union, United States, Britain, the European Union and the Arab League and skipped the signing ceremony in a hall at a Nigerian presidential villa. (AP Photo/George Osodi)ABUJA, Nigeria (AP) - Thanks in part to last-minute U.S. diplomacy, two years of Darfur peace talks beset by setbacks and frustration ended with a signing ceremony between the government and the largest rebel faction Friday.

Now the hard part: ensuring pledges to stop the fighting and begin rebuilding translate to an end to Darfur's suffering. The key may be a robust U.N. peacekeeping force, which Sudan's government has indicated it is willing to accept.

While the main Darfur rebel group signed the accord, two others rejected it, saying it did not go far enough to meet their demands for security and power-sharing guarantees and compensation for war victims. Optimism was muted by the two groups' absence and by a history of failure to live up to agreements.


Would you like to read the rest of this article?

Register with us. It's free!

Registered users have complete access to all articles.

The registration process takes less than one minute to complete. Remember, there is absolutely no charge for this service.

So please sign up or sign in to enjoy unrestricted access to eWoss News.

Other African News

Zimbabwe's Mugabe gives Olympic swimmer $100,000 10:37AM CT
Ex-track star Maree faces prison on fraud charges 9:39AM CT
Malaysian tanker hijacked in Gulf of Aden 5:58AM CT
Aid agencies say they can work again in Zimbabwe Aug 29 2008 7:57PM CT
Many months needed to deploy Darfur peacekeepers Aug 29 2008 7:30PM CT
Tunisian courts convicts 19 Islamic militants Aug 28 2008 9:02PM CT
Iran, Nigeria to share peaceful nuclear technology Aug 28 2008 6:39PM CT
Congo rebels, army clash near Congo gorilla park Aug 28 2008 2:31PM CT
UN official freed 2 months after Somalia abduction Aug 28 2008 9:49AM CT
Liberian ex-warlord dodges questions at hearing Aug 27 2008 5:02PM CT

   

© 2008 eWoss.com. All trademarks are the property of their respective owners. All Rights Reserved.
Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.