[dehai-news] (Reuters) Former Eritrea-backed rebel leader says E.Sudan risks war if soldiers not paid


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From: Biniam Haile \(SWE\) (eritrea.lave@comhem.se)
Date: Sun Aug 10 2008 - 22:14:14 EDT


Eastern Sudan risks war if soldiers not paid - former rebel
 
Monday 11 August 2008 03:30.
 
August 10, 2008 (KHARTOUM) - Sudan's eastern fighters may return to war
if they do not receive money and training to rejoin society as required
under an eastern peace deal, a presidential advisor warned on Sunday.
 
Amna Dirar, Amna Dirar, one of the leaders of the Eastern Front which
fought Khartoum for years before they joined a coalition government
after a peace deal in 2006, also said only a fifth of the cash promised
for developing the impoverished east had emerged in 2008.
 
"Whenever people are expecting to get their jobs and they feel...no
justice from previous experience in Sudan and eastern Sudan that means
people can take again their weapons and can fight again," she said in an
interview.
 
"That is what we are afraid of," she added.
 
she said almost 2,000 soldiers have been waiting in camps in the east to
be disarmed, demobilised and reintegrated into society, a process called
DDR. Another 1,200 have already joined Sudan's police or armed forces.
 
The east is one of the poorest parts of Sudan with rural malnutrition
rates as high as in other conflict areas in Africa's largest country and
drought often afflicting the population.
 
The east contains much of Sudan's gold reserves, its only seaport and it
is where the oil pipelines also export crude from.
 
Dirar said the government should fund projects the demobilised fighters
would like to pursue like training them for farming or giving them cash
to open private businesses.
 
But no money had yet been allocated by the ministry of finance and the
fighters were becoming frustrated, she added.
 
Developing the region was a key reason the Eastern Front took up arms
like rebels in Sudan's more famous western Darfur region and the
north-south conflict which was Africa's longest civil war.
 
The deal specified $600 million to be paid over four years with $125
million due in 2008. But Dirar said the $25 million so far paid this
year for development was not enough.
 
"We are the (most) marginalised of the marginalised," she said. "The $25
million itself cannot solve any kind of problem."
 
She said the government was struggling to find the cash for all the
peace deals it had signed and urged all those who had joined the
government to unite efforts to implement the accords rather than all
fighting separate battles.
 
"Although we have stopped fighting with weapons still we are fighting
...by words and by committees and meetings to ensure that the peace
agreement will be implemented," she said.
 
Dirar also said many in the east said they had not been counted in a
national census this year and that the results should be revised so
people would accept them.
 
The census results are due towards the end of the year and are sensitive
as they will help decide development quotas and constituencies ahead of
Sudan's first democratic elections in 23 years due in 2009.
 
Dirar said she was not very optimistic elections would happen on time
because the Darfur conflict was still unresolved adding that any vote
must include the west to be acceptable.
 
She said her party was open to electoral alliances but may decide to
field its own presidential candidate. So far the former southern rebel
Sudan People's Liberation Movement are the only party to declare they
will compete with President Omar Hassan al-Bashir.
 
(Reuters)
 

 

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