The Justice and Equality Movement had suspended negotiations with Khartoum in the wake of an International Criminal Court arrest warrant issued in March against Sudanese President Omar Hassan Al Bashir on war crimes charges. “We have come here with conditions and the desire of the international community to carry out the deal we have signed,” JEM spokesman Ahmed Hussein Adam said
in Doha. Last month, the JEM rebuffed Qatari efforts to broker new peace talks, charging that Khartoum had failed to honour a confidence-building deal in February aimed at paving the way for more substantial peace negotiations.
It said it wanted the Sudanese government to backtrack on its decision to expel 13 humanitarian organisations from Darfur after the ICC warrant was issued.