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This work represents the first detailed analysis of the negotiations between the Sudan government and the Sudanese Peoples Liberation Movement that were held in Abuja, attempting to put an end to the bloody Sudanese civil war that began in 1983. The study is based on the official minutes of the negotiations as well as other documents submitted by the parties. It examines the views of the parties on topics such as national identity, the relationship between religion and the state, security during the interim period, and self-determination. This work is an indispensable source that reveals the details of candid debates on crucial issues facing Sudan today.
Steven Wöndu is Managing Director of the New Sudan Foundation. Ann Lesch is Professor of Political Science at Villanova University.
chapter 1 Backgroundchapter 2 Abuja I: Preparations for Abuja; National Identity; Religion and State; Self-Determination; Interim Arrangements; Assessment of Abuja Ichapter 3 Abuja II: Pre-Talks; Religion and State; Interim Arrangements; Things Fall Apart; The Peace Process After Abujachapter 4 Appendiceschapter 5 Index
. . . this remarkable book goes a long way to explaining why a political settlement remains so far out of reach.