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04/07/2004
U.S. President George Bush and United Nations Secretary General
Kofi Annan today both called on the government of Sudan to halt attacks
against civilian populations in the country's western province of
Darfur and to allow humanitarian access to the region.
“The Sudanese government must immediately stop local militias from
committing atrocities against the local population and must provide
unrestricted access to humanitarian aid agencies,” President Bush said
in a statement from his ranch in Crawford, TX. “I condemn these
atrocities, which are displacing hundreds of thousands of civilians,
and I have expressed my views directly to President Bashir of Sudan.”
Speaking in Geneva, Secretary General Annan raised the possibility of
international military action to stop the death and displacement in
Darfur, if the Sudanese government refuses to move toward peace and
allow humanitarian access to the region. UN officials have
charged the government of Sudan and the Janjiweed militia it supports
with conducting “ethnic cleansing” in Darfur by carrying out “the
forcible and long-term displacement of targeted communities.” In
remarks during an international day of reflection on the 10th
anniversary of the start of genocide in Rwanda, Mr. Annan said that
“such reports leave me with a deep sense of foreboding.”
Some 800,000 Rwandans, generally members of the minority Tutsi tribe,
were slaughtered in 1994, as the UN, the U.S. and other countries
refused to intervene. (See Remembering
Rwanda) Mr. Annan’s suggestion that the UN may be willing to
send peacekeepers to Sudan to stop the killing shows that he is
prepared to work more assertively to stop the killing.
Taken together, the separate remarks by President Bush and Secretary
General Annan are an attempt to increase pressure on the government of
Sudan, which is trying to put down a 13 month rebellion in
Darfur. The fighting there has driven more than 110,000 refugees
into Chad, displaced at least 700,000 internally, destroyed many
villages and killed an estimated 10,000 or more people, largely
civilians. The government has generally prevented the
press, human rights monitors and humanitarian workers from working in
Darfur, so reports are not precise. Nevertheless, the information
that is available indicates that Darfur is the most acute humanitarian
and human rights crisis in the world today.
Mr. Annan clearly sees the crisis as a test of the UN’s ability to
mobilize the international political will to stop ethnic cleansing.
Although the U.S. is working hard to bring peace to Sudan, also
afflicted by a 21-year civil war between forces in the north and south,
it is unlikely to commit troops if an international force goes to
Darfur.
Mr. Annan made it clear that international military action in Darfur
would be a last resort after all diplomatic options are
exhausted. If the UN Security Council decided that an
international peacekeeping force was the only way to end the violence
in Darfur, the UN would face two immediate problems. The first
would be to find troops to deploy quickly and effectively to the
semi-arid region. The second challenge would be to find enough
troops at a time when UN peacekeeping capacity is already
stretched. (See Time
to Get Serious about UN Peace Operations Capacity)
For further information, contact Ken Bacon.
| Listen to a discussion of the possible use
of peacekeepers in Darfur April 7 2004 Edition of The World Sudan report (4:30) President George Bush has condemned the "ethnic cleansing" and atrocities that have taken place in Sudan recently. About 1,200 miles north of Rwanda, Arab militias have reportedly killed thousands of people in western Sudan since fighting broke out in the Darfur region early last year. Another 700,000 people are said to have been forced from their homes. The World's Jeb Sharp reports. |
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