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Sudan appears to ease opposition
to UN Darfur force
By Opheera McDoom
May 18, 2006 -(Reuters) Sudan on Thursday appeared to ease its opposition
to a U.N. force in its violent Darfur region saying high-level talks
with the United Nations were starting which would open a "new
window" in relations.
An under-funded and under-equipped AU force monitoring a truce in
Darfur has been unable to stop militia attacks on civilians caught
in the crossfire of a conflict which has claimed tens of thousands
of lives in the past three years.
Darfuris, the AU and the international community have called for
U.N. forces to take over from the AU but Sudan had fiercely rejected
the move before a peace deal was signed on May 5.
Presidential Advisor Majzoub al-Khalifa said U.N. Secretary-General
Kofi Annan had telephoned the presidency and would send a high-level
team to Sudan within 48 hours from Thursday to begin consultations
on a U.N. assessment mission.
"This is a good gesture from the U.N.," Khalifa, head
of the government's peace negotiating team, told Reuters.
"There is a retreat from the Security Council and (they) opened
a new window for discussion and dialogue with the government of
Sudan," he added.
The U.N. Security Council passed a resolution on Tuesday saying
a U.N. team, charged with determining how to transfer the AU mission
in Darfur to U.N. troops, had to begin work within a week in order
for troops to be in place quickly.
The AU agreed last week in Addis Ababa to transfer the mission as
soon as possible. But Sudan has not only previously rejected the
notion of U.N. troops in its vast west, it has refused entry to
the U.N. assessment team.
Khalifa would not say if the government had changed its position
on allowing the assessment team in, but said the talks were "a
step forward".
Thousands of Darfuris who fled their homes to miserable camps have
demonstrated daily against the peace deal, asking for U.N. troops
to be sent to protect them. They have attacked AU forces, further
restricting the force's ability to work.
The United Nations has said it wanted a stronger mandate for peacekeepers
to protect civilians, not just protect peace monitors. Khalifa said
the government's main concern was the mandate of any U.N. force
in Darfur.
"We are not against the AU, we are not against the U.N. (but)
... if the mandate is not agreeable to the government of Sudan,
this is a very serious issue," Khalifa said.
Sudan had also raised objections over the possible make-up of an
international force, which it portrayed as a possible Iraq-style
coalition of Western forces that would attract jihadists to Darfur.
The United Nations and the AU have said the green-helmeted AU troops
would remain with additional troops coming in under the blue flag
of the United Nations.
In an apparent change of position, Khalifa said on Thursday the
transition was merely a change of hats.
"The U.N. troops and the AU troops are the same -- this is
a transition of hats, of colour," he said.
The peace deal in the Nigerian capital Abuja was signed by only
one rebel group faction. Two other factions refused to sign despite
intense global pressure, saying it did not meet the demands of the
people of Darfur.
Khalifa said the deal would not be changed nor would any additions
be made, but that the government would talk to any factions to bring
them in to sign the deal.
From: http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/MCD841346.htm
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