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07/26/2006
On August 8, the Government of Sudan sent a fax to Refugees International in response to this bulletin. Read more here.
Contact: Ken Bacon
ri@refugeesinternational.org or 202.828.0110
The Darfur Peace Agreement, reached under the auspices of the African Union, imposes difficult and significant tasks on an AU peacekeeping force that is already struggling to carry out its limited mandate in western Sudan. Key security provisions of the accord will not be put into place unless the AU force receives more personnel, resources and a stronger mandate, or the United Nations takes over the AU’s security functions. Each option faces significant obstacles.
Three months after it was signed, the Darfur Peace Agreement (DPA) looks like a series of failed promises. Much of Darfur has grown less secure; displacement is increasing, and the two signatories—the Khartoum government and the faction of the Sudan Liberation Army led by Minni Minawi—are cooperating to fight groups that refused to sign the agreement rather than working together as partners for peace. Government disarmament of the Janjaweed, the largely Arab militia supported by Sudan’s military, has not begun, putting it more than a month behind the schedule in the peace accords.
In the midst of these developments, the AU appears paralyzed, demoralized and unable to provide the one condition that the two million displaced people in Darfur crave—security. “The AU is doing nothing but writing reports,” says a new arrival at a displaced persons camp in Tawilla, west of El Fasher in North Darfur. He is one of about 10,000 people to flee after attacks on surrounding villages by Minawi’s forces.
Following the signing of the DPA, AU personnel and vehicles have been attacked in camps where most residents are Fur, Darfur’s largest African tribe. Minawi is a member of the Zaghawa tribe, which accounts for about 8% of Darfur’s population. Since the DPA, Minawi has stayed on an AU base, and his lieutenants have been spotted driving AU vehicles, making the AU look like it is taking sides. “For me there is no difference between the African Union, the government of Sudan and the Minni Minawi faction,” says one person who recently fled attacks by Minawi’s troops.
Part of the frustration with the AU reflects a lack of understanding of its mandate. The African Union Mission in Sudan (AMIS) started as an observer mission to report on violations of a 2004 ceasefire; it was never given a mandate to protect civilians, which is what displaced Darfurians want it to do. Some 7,000 AMIS troops patrol an area the size of Texas. While AMIS complains about lack of resources, it actually has quite a few—more than 500 vehicles, 105 armored personnel carriers and 12 helicopters—stationed at well-secured American-built bases around Darfur. But AMIS deploys its assets in a very conservative, non protective way. Rather than regularly patrolling outside the camps when women leave to collect firewood, thus exposing themselves to attack, or in the late afternoon, when many attacks take place, it tends to drive its patrols through the camps in the middle of the day, when the conditions are generally quiet. Investigations of security violations often start days late.
The DPA continues the responsibilities of AMIS to monitor a cease fire but adds a long list of new responsibilities. For example, AMIS is supposed to:
Sudan: AU Peace & Security Council Must Extend Mandate of AMIS
Sudan: Can the Darfur-Darfur Dialogue and Consultation Help Bring Peace to Darfur?
Sudan: Saving the Darfur Peace Agreement
Sudan: Town in North Darfur Reflects Changing Nature of Conflict
Sudan: Despite the Darfur Peace Agreement, Death and Displacement in South Darfur
Sudan: UN Secretary-General Urges Action to Bring Peacekeeping Force to Darfur
Refugee Voices: Displaced Three Times in Three Years in Darfur
RI President Ken Bacon Discusses Darfur on Newshour with Jim Lehrer Tonight
OneWorld US: Bush Advised to Make Most of Meeting with Darfur Rebel
Response to Dr. Magzoub El Khalifa Regarding Security in Darfur
No Power to Protect: The African Union Mission in Sudan
Sudan: July Mission to Monitor Implementation of Darfur Peace Agreement
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