KHARTOUM, Sudan, Sept. 10 (UPI) -- A former southern
Sudanese rebel group has signed an agreement with a northern
opposition party to form an electoral alliance, the groups say.
The alliance between the Sudanese People's Liberation
Movement of the semi-autonomous southern half of the country and the
Islamic centrist Umma Party of former Sudanese Prime Minster Sadiq
al-Mahdi presents the strongest challenge yet to President Omar
al-Bashir's rule, The Christian Science Monitor reported.
The agreement to advance common goals and secure common
interests comes seven months ahead of Sudan's general elections,
scheduled for April.
The elections are seen as a potentially crucial step for
peace in the war-torn North African country -- at war with itself
for almost its entire post-colonial history, starting in 1956 --
since they would give Sudanese voters from north and south and even
the strife-torn Darfur region their first chance to elect their
leaders in a decade, the Monitor said.
"The SPLM is attempting to create a coalition that is a
political counterweight to (Bashir's National Congress Party's)
domination of the current system," John Prendergast, an Africa
expert at the Washington-based Enough Project, a human rights group
that focuses on the prevention of genocide, told the Monitor.
The National Congress has strong advantages over opposition
parties, Prendergast said, and its past use of bribery and armed
militias to undermine its enemies could be a strong motivation for
the SPLM to use all methods, including peaceful political ones, to
make friends.
With this alliance, "The NCP will have to rig the elections
fairly profoundly in order to win next year's vote," he said, the
Monitor reported.