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%T Sudan's transition to war and the limits of the UN's good offices
%A Perthes, Volker
%P 41
%V 14/2024
%D 2024
%K Revolution; Übergang zwischen politischen Systemen; Übergangsphase; Mandat der Vereinten Nationen; UNITAMS; Förderung/Unterstützung; Übergangsregierung; Staatsstreich/Militärputsch; Bürgerkrieg; Friedenssicherungsfunktion internationaler Akteure; Evaluation; Verhältnis Militär - Gesellschaft; Konflikteskalation; Humanitäre Krise; Humanitäre Auslandshilfe; Gesellschaftliche/Politische Opposition; Streitkräfte/militärische Verbände; Paramilitärische Verbände; Machtkampf; Burhan, Abdel Fattah; Daglo, Mohammed Hamdan; Hamdok, Abdallah
%@ 1863-1053
%~ SWP
%> https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-98424-6
%X The United Nations Integrated Transition Assistance Mission in Sudan (UNITAMS) was established at the request of Sudan's government to assist the country's political "transition" towards domestic peace and demo­cratic governance. Rather then being able to see its mandate through, the Mission witnessed a transition to the ongoing war between the country’s two military formations. UNITAMS' good-offices function came into play in all three phases of the Mission's lifespan - under the civilian-military partnership, under the military government, and in the first weeks of the war. Facilitation efforts became particularly relevant following the October 2021 military coup and after the conclusion of a Framework Political Agreement by the military and their civilian counterparts in December 2022. UNITAMS worked with a broad spectrum of civilian, "para-civilian" and military Sudanese stakeholders and with various regional and inter­national partners. The establishment of the Tripartite Mechanism in coop­eration with the African Union and the Inter-Governmental Authority on Development (IGAD) lent additional legitimacy to the efforts of all three organisations - and was at the same time a valuable learning exercise. One of the main lesson for international actors is not to underestimate the strength of actors who fear losing out in a transition process that the international community seeks to support. The UNITAMS experience demonstrates that even a small political mis­sion can play an effective good-offices role, but it also shows the limits of this function - especially where military actors are set for war. (author's abstract)
%C DEU
%C Berlin
%G en
%9 Arbeitspapier
%W GESIS - http://www.gesis.org
%~ SSOAR - http://www.ssoar.info