Summary Agar, formerly Blue Nile state governor, is chairman of Sudan People's Liberation Movement-North.
KHARTOUM (AFP) - A Sudanese court on Thursday sentenced to death in absentia a former governor who is now a rebel leader, along with another insurgent chief, a lawyer said.
"Seventeen people were sentenced in absentia to be executed by hanging. These include Malik Agar and Yassir Arman," said Al-Tigani Hassan, a lawyer who was present for the verdict in Singa town, the capital of Sennar state.
Agar, formerly Blue Nile state governor, is chairman of the Sudan People s Liberation Movement-North, and Arman is secretary general of the movement, which has been fighting in South Kordofan and Blue Nile for almost three years.
The verdict came at the end of a nine-month trial, but also followed by 12 days the adjournment of African Union-mediated peace talks between Khartoum and the SPLM-N in Addis Ababa.
The two sides were deadlocked, said the AU.
It gave them until April 30 to reach a peace deal in the conflict which, according to the United Nations, has displaced or otherwise affected an estimated 1.2 million people.
Arman is head of the SPLM-N delegation at the talks.
All the accused belonged to SPLM-N and were convicted of terrorism, weapons and other criminal charges but had no legal representation in court, said Hassan.
He was part of the defence team for another 78 SPLM-N accused, both civilian members and those from its military wing, who were arrested.
Of those 78, 31 were acquitted, 46 were given life sentences and one was sentenced to death along with the 17 sentenced in absentia, the lawyer said.
