North and south Sudan to start Abyei talks

Abyei was a major battleground in Sudan`s last civil war and has symbolic importance for both sides.

Juba: Northern and southern Sudanese representatives will meet on Saturday to try to defuse tensions over the disputed Abyei region, officials said, with just six weeks left before the south is set to secede.

Northern Sudanese armed forces seized the disputed Abyei region last week, forcing tens of thousands of people to flee and raising fears the north and south could return to full-blown conflict. The move drew sharp international criticism.

Abyei was a major battleground in Sudan`s last civil war and has symbolic importance for both sides. The region is used all year round by the south-linked Dinka Ngok people and for part of the year by northern Arab Misseriya nomads.

The status of the fertile region, which produces some oil, has remained one of the most contentious issues in the run up to the split scheduled for July 9.

South Sudan`s Vice President Riek Machar will meet officials in the northern capital Khartoum, Mangar Amerdid, a spokesman for south Sudanese President Salva Kiir, said in Juba.

"His Excellency Riek Machar is traveling to Khartoum today for talks. He is seeing if there is any way to ease the tension between north and south," he said.

North Sudanese state and other media said Machar would meet north Sudan`s Vice President Ali Osman Mohamed Taha.

Envoys from north and south Sudan were also expected to meet in the Ethiopian capital of Addis Ababa on Saturday to try to end the crisis, an African Union official said.

Analysts fear a north Sudanese land grab could spark a return to full-blown conflict, a development that would have a devastating impact on the region by sending refugees back across borders and creating a failed state in the south at birth.

Southern Sudanese voted overwhelmingly to secede in a January referendum guaranteed by a 2005 peace deal that ended decades of civil war between the mainly-Muslim north and the south, where most follow Christian or traditional beliefs.

In Juba, the southern capital, about 100 people demonstrated on Saturday to pray for those killed in the violence in Abyei.

The UN Mission in Sudan resumed land and air patrols in the area on Thursday, spokesman Kouider Zerrouk said. It had halted them temporarily after the northern armed forces moved into Abyei.

Bureau Report

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