ACCRA, Ghana - Plans to deploy a joint UN-African Union peacekeeping force to
Sudan's violence-plagued Darfur region could still be derailed by a dearth in
funding and political will, the chairman of the African Union warned Sunday.
African Union leaders listen to a speech during the opening
ceremony of the AU summit in Accra, Ghana Sunday, July 1, 2007. [AP]
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"What is lacking today in the
implementation of the process is financial resources to put peacekeeping troops
on the ground," Alpha Oumar Konare said at the opening session of a summit of
the 53-member organization. Many AU member states have said they don't have
enough funds to outfit their soldiers for peacekeeping operations.
The main official topic of debate at the three-day summit is a
long-discussed, but elusive idea for a pan-African government, but crises in
Sudan and Zimbabwe are also expected to get attention.
Konare acknowledged that Sudan had, after much negotiation, accepted plans
for a joint peacekeeping force, but he questioned the Sudanese government's
commitment to peace.
"It is also important that Sudan end the bombardments," Konare said,
referring to the government's four-year battle with rebels in Darfur.
The proposed 23,000-strong UN-AU hybrid force is aimed at bolstering the
beleaguered 7,000-strong AU force now in Darfur.
Sudan's president, who canceled his trip to the summit after the death of an
adviser, held a teleconference from Khartoum late Saturday in which he charged
that Western governments were intervening in Darfur out of self-serving motives.
"Some of them are only involved because of what they will gain from the
resources of the people," Omar al-Bashir said.
Deputy UN Secretary-General Asha-Rose Migiro commended the AU for addressing
the Darfur crisis when no one else would, but said African states alone lack
resources to end the conflict. She told those at the opening session they should
"urgently proceed" with the hybrid force.
Britain and Ghana, which currently holds the rotating AU presidency, are
introducing a resolution to the UN Security Council to authorize the joint UN-AU
force.
Ghanaian authorities banned protests until the final day of the summit on
Tuesday, and 2,000 police fanned out across this West African capital to enforce
the mandate. Planned demonstrations include one by Zimbabwean activists decrying
the crackdown on dissidents in their country.
On the sidelines of the summit, South African President Thabo Mbeki is
expected to report on his effort to mediate a solution in Zimbabwe amid the
government crackdown. The country's political crisis is exacerbated by
skyrocketing inflation, power and water outages, and food shortages.
Late Sunday, a cheering crowd of teenagers held a rally in support of
Zimbabwe's president, Robert Mugabe. Mugabe addressed the crowd, telling them
that African unity was important to making the continent truly independent of
the West.
"Many countries have oil, gold, diamond, copper, platinum - but we cannot put
our acts together. We must unite not just politically but also economically,"
Mugabe said.
He also defended Zimbabwe's policy of seizing white-owned farms and handing
them over to blacks as an example of how African countries can free themselves
from colonial powers.
The policy has been blamed for disrupting the economy of the former regional
breadbasket, leading to acute shortages of food, hard currency, gasoline,
medicines and other essential imports.