Monday 11 March 2013

According to this the two Sudan should have to signe peace !!!


Comprehensive agreement between Khartoum and Juba over hours

Area (14) miles of the area will be cooperation and convergence among citizens
03-11-2013 02:42 AM
Addis Ababa, Khartoum (agencies) - was launched yesterday afternoon, negotiations between the delegations of the states of Sudan and South Sudan at the level of the Supreme Committee, to consider the implementation of the comprehensive cooperation agreements, amid expectations that a full agreement is signed on the implementation schedules in a matter of hours. The channel quoted "Sunrise" space Sudanese Movdha for negotiations in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa as saying that round negotiations began meetings separate held by the Commission African mediation led by Thabo Mbeki with the two delegations, each separately, during which the formation of a technical committee of the two sides to put times on the implementation of cooperation agreements nine To initiate the process landed on the ground. He pointed out that the technical committee will focus primarily on the development times for pumping oil in conjunction with the implementation of the Protocol security and economic according to specific dates. Said channel sources from inside the negotiations, "he case vacuum Committee by Tam, may be signed within the next 24 hours on the matrix full implementation of cooperation agreements concluded by the two heads of state last September.



Sudan No Longer Africa's Largest Country
Now that the South Sudan has gained independence (See: New Country - South Sudan), the remainder of Sudan is no longer Africa's largest country by area. Sudan's one-time top spot was  followed by Algeria in second place and the Democratic Republic of the Congo in third. However, the secession of South Sudan  removed a substantial portion of Sudan's territory, and the northern remainder of the country now ranks third in Africa - after Algeria and the DRC. South Sudan ranks 19th, out of a total of 54 U.N.-recognized countries in Africa. (Graphic my own work, based on this map by Wikipedia user Mangwanani. License: CC BY-SA)

No comments:

Post a Comment