'This change will be positive'
2005-07-12 13:51
Asmara - Rebel groups fighting in Sudan's western and eastern regions have voiced hope that former southern rebel chief and Sudan's new vice-president John Garang would help restore stability in the vast African nation.
Garang was over the weekend sworn in to the post of vice-president as a new power-sharing constitution came into force in a bid to seal a peace pact ending two decades of civil war between the Sudan People's Liberation Movement/Army (SPLM/A) and the Khartoum government.
"Change will happen, this change for sure will be positive," Salah Barqueen, a senior official from the Eastern Front, said on Monday. The front last month launched a major military offensive against the government in the Red Sea state.
"Wait and see" stance
Izzedine Baggi, a senior official from the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM), which together with the Sudan Liberation Movement, have been fighting the government in the western region of Darfur for more than two years, opted for a "wait and see" stance.
"John Garang must take care of the Darfur problem. We don't have any problem with Dr Garang," Baggi said on Monday. "For now, it's wait and see, the coming days will tell us everything."
The Eastern Front, formed in February 2005, consists mainly rebels from the Beja Congress and the Free Lions and other small insurgent groups.
The Beja Congress first took up arms against Khartoum in 1994 and now controls the region north of the town of Kassala near the Eritrean border and since then the region has been a theatre of sporadic fighting.
Insurgents in both western and eastern regions of Sudan are fighting to end years of alleged marginalisation by successive Islamic governments in Khartoum.
- AFP