Sudan opposition to boycott national dialogue

Sudan opposition to boycott national dialogue

Almost all of the 21 Sudanese opposition parties that were participating in a year-long national dialogue will pull out of the talks, as well as upcoming elections, in the latest sign of deteriorating reconciliation efforts, party representatives have said.

Eighteen opposition parties will not attend a national dialogue meeting with the president on Wednesday, citing worsening political and press freedoms, a statement from the parties said on Tuesday.

President Omar al-Bashir had called for a national dialogue and brought together all political actors last January. However, little progress has been made, and separate negotiations with rebels have faltered.

"We have decided to suspend participation in the national dialogue due to the president's decisions to not release political detainees, allow room for political action, or stop the confiscation of newspapers," said Hassan Osman Rizk, a former minister under Bashir and the current vice president of the Reform Now party.

One opposition party after another has opted to boycott a political process that they say is dominated by Bashir and his circle, who have been in power for 25 years.

The government was not immediately available for comment.

The most prominent of the three parties still participating in the dialogue include the Popular Congress Party (PCP), headed by former Bashir ally Hassan al-Turabi.

'Rushed pull-out'

"The parties that decided to pull out rushed into this decision," said PCP political secretary Kamal Omar. "We will continue for lack of an alternative."

The PCP is still boycotting the April presidential and parliamentary polls, along with all other major opposition parties. The regime has said that elections will continue as planned.

The unraveling political rapprochement in Khartoum takes place against a backdrop of increasing violence in the country's periphery.

The UN has warned of a deteriorating situation in Darfur, as the government has pushed for UN-African Union peacekeepers to exit the war-torn western region.

Negotiators failed last month to reach a ceasefire in a related but separate insurgency in the southern provinces of Blue Nile and South Kordofan mounted mostly by former civil war fighters who were left in Sudan after South Sudan seceded in 2011.

The government has rebuffed opposition and rebel demands to link political negotiations with peace talks.

 


PHOTO CAPTION

Opposition parties accuse Bashir of failing to follow through with promises of political reform [AFP]


Aljazeera

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