Monday 24 September 2012

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Khartoum: there are issues we do not reach agreement, Juba: we will finish it on Monday there will be an agreement. «Bashir's meeting with Ethiopian Prime Minister Haile Mary Ddisalegn in Addis Ababa on Sunday» After meeting al-Bashir and Kiir 09-24-2012 04:16 AM ADDIS ABABA (Reuters) - met President of Sudan and South Sudan in the late evening on Sunday to try to reach an agreement to end hostilities and resume oil exports, but officials said no breakthrough after about a security agreement after two weeks of talks in Ethiopia. South Sudan said that he expected to reach Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir and his counterpart Salva Kiir to agreement on Monday after an informal extension of the deadline set by the Security Council of the UN. Minister of Cabinet Affairs in South Sudan, Deng Alor said Kiir and Bashir will reach an agreement on Monday. He told reporters after the start of the summit and, without going into details, "we will finish it on Monday there will be an agreement." The two presidents had يتجاذبان modern two parties leaving a hotel room where the meeting was held. Officials said they would meet again on Monday morning. Badr al-Din Abdullah, a spokesman for the Sudanese delegation said earlier that there are differences still exist. He explained, "We have agreed on a lot of topics, but there are still issues we do not reach agreement on them after and specifically the issue of security." The two countries should reach a comprehensive peace agreement by Sunday or face the risk of sanctions from the UN Security Council of the UN. The UN timed officially at midnight on Saturday, but before the parties actually expanse until the end of the summit, led by the African Union to reach an agreement. Diplomats trying to mediate between the two foes are precedents with respect to the signing of the agreements and non-implementation. Parties desperately needs oil revenues. The two countries reached a tentative agreement in August to resume oil exports from southern Sudan, which is not overlooking the sea or rivers through Sudan through its ports overlooking the Red Sea after Juba halted production after a dispute over export duties. But Sudan insists on reaching a security agreement first. Sudan has increased hopes on Saturday to reach an agreement after its approval conditional on the map and set up by the African Union for a demilitarized border zone after objection for months. But Abdullah said on Sunday that the issue was not resolved. Juba already accepted the map of the African Union. Bashir first met Ethiopian Prime Minister Haile Mariam Ddisalegn on Sunday and then spent - like Kerr - most of the day with his entourage. He said the Ethiopian Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Berhana Jprekerestus after meeting Bashir and Ddisalegnhill "issues are on the table and we hope and optimism that things are moving forward." And leave the separation is a long list of unresolved issues such as border demarcation and oil fees south and ending accusations of support for each country for the rebels in the territory of the other. The African and Western officials hope to reach a peace agreement with Israel and widespread, but several rounds of talks in Addis Ababa have not yielded significant progress on determining the fate of the five disputed border areas. And this probably will leave for a future tour or for a long arbitration process possible. It is expected that the two presidents also looking solution to the disputed border region of Abyei where previous attempts failed to hold a referendum because of the lack of agreement between the two parties over who is entitled to vote

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