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Key Provisions of
the Darfur Peace Agreement (DPA)
On May 5, 2006, the Inter-Sudanese Peace Talks on the Conflict in Darfur,
held in Abuja, Nigeria, concluded with an agreement between the Government of
Sudan and one faction of the Sudan Liberation Army (SLA) rebel group. Two
other rebel groups, another faction of the SLA and the Justice and Equality Movement
(JEM), did not sign the agreement; the African Union (AU) has established a May
31 deadline for these other groups to agree to its terms.
The Darfur Peace Agreement (DPA) covers four main subject areas:
- Power Sharing;
- Wealth Sharing;
- Security Arrangements; and
- Darfur-Darfur Dialogue and Consultation (DDDC).
Each of these is summarized below.
Power Sharing
- Establishes, as the fourth ranking national official (after the President
and two Vice Presidents) a new position of Senior Assistant to the President,
to be chosen from a list proposed by the rebel groups that sign the DPA.
- Provides that this official will serve as chair of a new Transitional Darfur
Regional Authority (TDRA) with principal responsibility for implementing the
DPA. (The TDRA also will include the heads of agencies responsible for
core functions such as rehabilitation and resettlement, reconstruction and development,
settlement of land disputes, implementation of security arrangements, and compensation
for losses resulting form the conflict.)
- Provides that eight of the ten TDRA members will be nominated by the rebels.
- Reserves for members of rebel groups that sign the DPA a minority of government
positions, including one governorship, two deputy governorships, and almost 30
percent of the seats in the regional legislatures, until national and regional
elections are held in three years.
- Establishes mechanisms to help train and place Darfurians in other local
and national positions, with a target level for representation in the national
civil service to be determined by a Panel of Experts to include some members
nominated by the rebel groups that sign the DPA.
- Exempts Darfurian students from payment of school fees for five years, and
reserves for ten years 15 percent of incoming seats at universities in Khartoum,
and 50 percent at universities in Darfur for such students.
- Requires that no later than 2010, a referendum is to be held in Darfur to
determine whether the three regional states should be consolidated into one region
(seen as likely to increase Darfur’s influence in the national government)
or remain separate states.
Wealth Sharing
- Provides for a Panel of Experts to establish a formula for allocation to
Darfur of a fair portion of national revenues, including from the oil industry.
- Establishes a new Darfur Reconstruction and Development Fund to manage rehabilitation,
reconstruction, and development -- to be funded by the national government at
levels of $300 million in 2006 and $200 million each in 2007 and 2008, and also
financed by international donors
- Creates a Compensation Commission with guidelines for determination and payment
of compensation and other remedies for victims of the conflict, and provides
that the national government will make an initial $30 million contribution to
the Compensation Fund.
- Grants refugees and internally displaced persons the right to restitution
or adequate compensation for property loss.
- Establishes a Darfur Rehabilitation and Resettlement Commission to assist
such persons and facilitate their safe return home.
- Establishes commissions to arbitrate title disputes and develop policies
for land use management and natural resource development.
Security Arrangements
- Sets out a specific timeline and organizational structures for (1) disarming
the pro-government Janjaweed militia within five months, (2) incorporating members
of the rebel groups into the Sudanese military forces or assisting their integration
into civilian life, and (3) returning principal responsibility for law enforcement
in Darfur to a reformed civilian police force.
- Provides that the Janjaweed will be confined to their camps and must relinquish
all heavy weapons before any rebel forces are asked to withdraw and demobilize.
- Prohibits armed forces from displaced persons camps and other civilian areas,
including humanitarian supply routes.
- Grants expanded powers to the African Union-run Ceasefire Commission, including
to identify those responsible for ceasefire violations and to recommend measures
against them by the AU Peace and Security Council.
- Provides that these security arrangements will be monitored by African Union
peacekeeping forces (which are expected to be strengthened and then integrated
into a United Nations peacekeeping force by later this year).
Darfur-Darfur Dialogue and Consultation (DDDC)
- Provides for the African Union to convene 60 days after the Agreement comes
into force a community-based reconciliation process in Darfur – in recognition
that many stakeholders in Darfur were not represented by the negotiating parties
in Abuja.
- Specifies that this DDDC process is to be chaired by an “African of
independence and integrity” and assisted by a team of elders from Darfur,
and shall have between 800 and 1000 delegates, to include sheiks and tribal leaders,
refugees, internally displaced persons, women, rebel groups, militias, civil
society, and other local parties.
- Provides that this process is to be organized by a Preparatory Committee
appointed by the African Union and to include members of the rebel groups and
the Government of Sudan, as well as tribal leaders and representatives of civil
society and international organizations including the African Union, United Nations,
and Arab League.
- Empowers the DDDC to make recommendations to the relevant local and national
authorities, and to establish a permanent Peace and Reconciliation Council to
continue its work.
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