Darfur group reaches accord



U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Robert Zoellick tempered his celebration with caution.
KNIGHT RIDDER NEWSPAPERS
NAIROBI, Kenya -- Darfur's leading rebel group bowed to pressure from high-powered Western and African diplomats on Friday and accepted a peace agreement with the government of Sudan to end a bloody three-year war.
But analysts immediately raised doubts about whether the agreement would stop the fighting or end attacks on civilians by government-backed militias. The attacks have led to the deaths of more than 200,000 people in a campaign the United States has called genocide.
U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Robert Zoellick, who brokered three days of talks that ended with an all-night session, said the agreement should pave the way for a United Nations peacekeeping force to arrive as early as this fall to stabilize the devastated region. But even he tempered his celebration with caution.
Quotable
"This can be a very important day of hope and opportunity for the poor people of Darfur, who have been suffering, but it is only a step," he told reporters at the negotiations in Abuja, Nigeria.
The U.N. Security Council has approved sending a peacekeeping mission to Sudan as early as Sept. 30, but the Sudanese government so far has opposed the idea. Sudanese representatives to the negotiations said, however, that they would allow the U.N. mission once a peace agreement was in place.
Two smaller rebel factions declined to sign the agreement, but analysts said those groups weren't strong enough to continue the conflict on their own. They predicted that those factions' leaders would eventually join the agreement or go into exile.
The conflict in Darfur, which U.N. officials have labeled the world's worst humanitarian crisis, began in 2003 when Darfur's black villagers took up arms against the Arab-dominated government in Khartoum, seeking greater political rights.
Khartoum armed Arab militias known as the janjaweed to crush the rebels, launching a campaign of looting, arson and murder that forced more than 2 million people from their homes.
Provisions
The agreement calls for the Sudanese government to present a plan within 30 days to disarm the janjaweed. The accord also calls for 4,000 rebel troops to be accepted into the national military and for 1,000 to join police forces.
Rebels said their demands for greater political representation and a bigger share of the national wealth weren't met. The agreement allocates Darfur a few more seats in the national legislature, but not the vice presidential post that some rebels wanted.
Experts said that, given Sudan's track record, sustained international pressure on Khartoum and the rebels would be needed to ensure the success of the peace agreement.
They noted that the government signed a peace deal last year with rebels in southern Sudan, ending a two-decade civil war there. But Khartoum has repeatedly stalled implementation of the so-called Comprehensive Peace Agreement -- which ignored the conflicts in Darfur and in Sudan's simmering east -- while the southern rebels have been plagued by internal squabbling.
In recent months, according to rights groups, Sudan has backed janjaweed attacks in neighboring Chad, where tens of thousands of Darfur refugees have sought shelter. Many analysts also believe Khartoum was behind a failed coup attempt in Chad last month.
Humanitarian officials say Khartoum is blocking access to some of the hardest-hit parts of Darfur, where about 1.8 million people live in camps. Last month, the government prevented U.N. emergency relief coordinator Jan Egeland from visiting Darfur, although Egeland plans to return next week.