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SUDAN: Egeland urges Darfur combatants
to build on peace pact
May 9, 2006 -(IRIN) United Nations Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian
Affairs Jan Egeland on Tuesday urged the Sudanese government and
insurgents in the country's strife-torn Darfur to take advantage
of the peace deal signed last week between Khartoum and a rebel
group to bring the conflict in the region to an end.
"This the time when we could make a change for the better,
but it could also be the time for lost opportunity," Egeland
told a news conference in Khartoum after spending two days assessing
the humanitarian situation in Darfur. He said parties to the conflict
should "seize" the opportunity for peace and say "enough
is enough" to violence.
The groundbreaking deal, signed on 5 May by government and the largest
of the three rebel groups involved in the three-year conflict, the
Sudan Liberation Movement/Army, provides for the disarmament of
the Darfur rebels as well as the allegedly Khartoum-backed Janjawid
militia, who are blamed for most of the atrocities against civilians
in Darfur.
Egeland had a meeting with Kosti Manibe, Sudan's minister for humanitarian
affairs, who promised to end entry and travel restrictions for humanitarian
workers in Sudan.
United States President George W Bush, meanwhile, said that African
Union (AU) troops currently protecting civilians in Darfur should
form the core of a "more mobile and more capable" military
force that "generates better intelligence and is given a clear
mandate to protect the civilians from harm." He said US Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice would address the UN Security Council
on Tuesday about the deployment of UN troops in Darfur.
"She's going to request a resolution that will accelerate the
deployment of UN peacekeepers into Darfur. We're now working with
the UN to identify countries that contribute those troops so the
peacekeeping effort will be robust," Bush said during a media
briefing at the White House on Monday.
The 7,000-strong AU force is currently responsible for patrolling
Darfur, an area the size of France, with limited resources and a
weak mandate. Rebel groups, government troops and militia allegedly
allied to the army have wreaked havoc in the region since early
2003, and civilians have born the brunt of the conflict. The UN
estimates that 3.6 million people - of whom 1.8 million are internally
displaced and 200,000 have fled to neighbouring Chad - are affected
by the conflict. More than 200,000 people have been killed as a
result of violence.
Bush said he had called Sudan President Umar el-Bashir to commend
him on the signing of the peace agreement with the SLM/A and to
urge the government’s support of a UN force. "The vulnerable
people of Darfur deserve more than sympathy. They deserve the active
protection that UN peacekeepers can provide," Bush added.
Advocacy group, Human Rights Watch (HRW), welcomed the signing of
a peace deal and urged parties to the conflict to refrain from attacking
humanitarian agencies, which prevented their own countrymen receiving
much-need aid.
"After three years of horrendous attacks, more than three million
people in Darfur depend on international aid to survive," said
Peter Takirambudde, HRW’s Africa director, in a briefing paper
on Darfur released on Monday. "The warring parties must give
humanitarian aid workers access to those in need. The international
community must ensure they stick to the deal."
HRW said the human rights situation in Darfur had deteriorated in
recent months, despite commitments by all parties to the conflict
to respect a ceasefire agreement signed in April 2004. "International
pressure forced the Sudanese government to allow aid agencies into
Darfur in 2004, but since then Khartoum has been trying to strangle
relief efforts," said Takirambudde, who added that rebel movements
had hindered humanitarian work in many areas as well. "Rebel
commanders in Darfur must instruct their forces to protect all civilians,
including aid workers, and the humanitarian supplies intended for
civilians."
Bush said he had asked Congress to increase food aid to Sudan by
an additional US$225 million. "To get food to Darfur quickly,
I've directed USAID [US Agency for International Development] to
ship emergency food stockpiles. I've directed five ships and ordered
them to be loaded with food and proceed immediately to Port Sudan.
I've ordered the emergency purchase of another 40,000 metric tons
of food for rapid shipment to Sudan. These actions will allow the
[UN] World Food Programme [WFP] to restore full food rations to
the people of Darfur this summer," he said.
WFP had since the beginning of May reduced the daily food rations
for vulnerable people in Darfur to as little as 1,050 kilocalories
- half the minimum daily requirement of 2,100 kilocalories per person
- in a bid to make its limited food stocks last longer during the
"hunger season," the annual preharvest period from July
to September, when needs are the greatest.
From: http://irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=53242&SelectRegion=East_Africa&SelectCountry=SUDAN
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