ADDIS ABABA - Sudan accepts in principle UN and African Union forces in its
war-ravaged Darfur region but has yet to agree on the number of troops to be
deployed, UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan said on Thursday.
"It is agreed in principle that, pending clarification of the size of the
force, we should be able to take it forward," he told reporters at the African
Union headquarters in Addis Ababa.
UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, second from left, surrounded
by aides and bodyguards leaves after the first half of a high level
meeting on the war torn region of Darfur in the African Union Headquarters
in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa, Thursday, November 16, 2006.
[AP]
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"The troops should be sourced
from Africa as far as possible and the command and control structure would be
provided by the UN," he added.
Diplomats said Sudan had concerns over both the size of the force in Darfur
and its command structure.
"The UN says 17,000 (troops), that figure is very high. We think 11,000 to
12,000," said Sudan's UN ambassador Abdalmahmood Abdalhaleem Mohamad.
The United Nations plan, which estimates say could cost more than $1 billion
a year, also calls for 3,000 police.
The Sudanese envoy said government officials would respond to the latest
proposal before the AU Peace and Security Council meets on November 24 to
discuss Darfur.
The West has pushed hard for a UN peacekeeping force to help the underfunded
AU soldiers, but Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir has flatly rejected
this and insisted the AU remain in charge.
With the clock ticking toward December 31 when the AU's extended mandate in
Darfur expires, diplomats have been struggling to break the impasse over a
protection force in western Sudan.
On his farewell trip to Africa, Annan summoned officials from the UN Security
Council's permanent members, the European Union, Egypt, Gabon and the Arab
League to Thursday's one-day talks on Darfur.
The AU also invited Libya, Nigeria, Rwanda, Senegal and South Africa.
"There is a mood for cooperation between the African Union and the UN giving
technical support" like mine clearance, staff, logistics and radios," Sudanese
Foreign Minister Lam Akol said earlier on Thursday.
"But that must be coupled with pressure on all groups to respect a
ceasefire," he added.
Diplomats said AU and UN officials will meet rebels who did not sign the
Darfur peace deal in the next two weeks.
"MASSIVE ESCALATION"
Violence, disease and hunger have killed some 200,000 people since 2003 and
driven more than 2.5 million from their homes. Experts say since one of three
rebel factions signed a peace agreement in May the violence has increased.
Before Thursday's meeting began, Sudanese rebels accused government troops
and militias of killing more than 50 people in an attack on their positions in
north Darfur.
The head of one faction of the rebel Sudan Liberation Army (SLA) said
government troops, backed by allied Janjaweed militia, attacked its positions in
the Deir Mazza area on Wednesday, killing several rebels and the rest civilians.
The government had used fighter planes, Abdel Wahed al-Nur told Reuters,
calling the attack "a massive escalation from the government" which would bring
an SLA response.
A Sudanese army spokesman, who declined to be named, said the report was "100
percent incorrect."
Akol blamed rebels for trying to undermine peace. "Unfortunately, when you
have war, people die, which is why we are serious about ending it," he added.
There was no immediate word from the AU.
UN humanitarian chief Jan Egeland arrived in Darfur on Thursday for a
three-day trip but was told all of his proposed destinations were too insecure
to visit.
Fighting between the government and Darfur rebels has spilled into both Chad
and the Central African Republic.
Darfur erupted in 2003 when mostly non-Arabs began fighting for a bigger
slice of power and resources, and the government in turn backed and armed Arab
militia known as Janjaweed, who have pillaged, raped and killed
villagers.