TASIS welcomes Nairobi roadmap, urges unified anti-war front

The Sudan Founding Alliance (TASIS) has welcomed the outcomes of meetings held by Sudanese Declaration of Principles forces in Nairobi, saying the agreed charter and roadmap offer a serious basis for ending the war and launching a new political process.

The meetings, held in the Kenyan capital under the slogan “towards building a new homeland and a new path to a solution,” produced a political charter and a roadmap aimed at stopping and ending the war. The roadmap also calls for a Sudanese-led political process involving anti-war civilian forces and designed to address the root causes of the country’s crisis.

In a statement issued by its official spokesperson Ahmed Tugod Lisan, TASIS said the outcomes of the Nairobi meeting were consistent with its own declared positions and political vision for ending the conflict.

The alliance said the agreed approach, including preparatory steps, political mechanisms, participating parties and negotiating platforms, aligned with its call for a process that tackles the causes of Sudan’s repeated wars rather than simply managing the current conflict.

TASIS also backed the statement issued by the Quad, describing it as the correct entry point for launching a new political process that addresses humanitarian and security issues before moving into broader political negotiations.

“Any new path outside this framework would complicate the process and prolong the conflict,” the alliance said.

The statement reaffirmed TASIS’s position that Sudan’s voluntary unity, territorial integrity and sovereignty remain fixed principles. It rejected any project aimed at dividing the country in ways that contradict the alliance’s founding charter.

TASIS said it seeks, as a direct party to the political process, a historic, just, final and comprehensive settlement to Sudan’s long-running crises. It said such a settlement must include the creation of new national military and security institutions, moving beyond what it described as old approaches based on reform, absorption, assimilation or integration.

The alliance also voiced full solidarity with efforts to confront hate speech, racism and incitement targeting specific social groups, warning against the use of discrimination as a political tool.

TASIS said it supports any effort to unify the positions of civilian anti-war forces, adding that there are many shared positions between the Sudanese Declaration of Principles forces and the Sudan Founding Alliance.

The statement accused the Islamic Movement, its political arm and allies of igniting the war, rejecting political initiatives and withdrawing from negotiating platforms. TASIS said those forces had used the continuation of the war as a means of political survival and had imposed a complex reality through military and security tools.

It described the Islamic Movement as a force defeated by the December revolution, dissolved by law and designated as terrorist.

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