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AU blames Khartoum for worsening Darfur situation
16 Dec 2006 10:18:32 GMT
Source: Reuters

ADDIS ABABA, Dec 16 (Reuters) - The African Union (AU) on Saturday said the situation in Sudan's troubled Darfur region was worsening due to the return of re-armed Janjaweed militia and Khartoum's resolve to use military force.

Sudan faces possible sanctions by the United States and its allies if it does not allow international peacekeepers in to support AU forces in Darfur where nearly four years of fighting have killed more than 200,000 people.

"The security situation in Darfur is fast deteriorating mainly because of the re-emergence of Janjaweed militias," said an AU communique issued at the end of a meeting on Darfur.

"(They) seem to have been supplied and rearmed and have been carrying out nefarious activities with impunity in parts of Darfur, particularly in areas controlled by the government of Sudan."

The statement added that another cause for the decline was Khartoum's insistence on a military option to quell the conflict.

Mostly non-Arab rebels took up arms in early 2003, accusing the central government of marginalising the arid area. Khartoum mobilised tribal militias to quell the revolt. Those militias now stand accused of a campaign of rape, murder and pillage.

The United Nations has been trying without much success to persuade the Sudanese government to accept the deployment of 22,500 U.N. troops and police to form part of a "hybrid" force with the AU in Darfur.

The African Union currently has some 7,000 troops in the vast desert region but its force is widely viewed as lacking funds, manpower and equipment to maintain security.

The AU also condemned attacks by the National Redemption Front (NRF) in Darfur. The rebel faction is comprised of groups that rejected a peace deal with the government signed in May.

"The meeting expressed deep concern on the prevailing situation in El Fasher, El Geneina, Kutum and Merllit characterised by harassment, attacks and killings of innocent civilians including IDPs (internally displace people)," the AU communique said.

It deplored attacks on AU personnel including the abduction of a military officer on Dec. 10 in El Fasher.
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A Chad army soldier gestures at a battlefield in Hadjer Marfaine, a mountainous area close to the Sudanese border, December 14, 2006. Chad's army said on Friday it killed two rebel military chiefs as it swept their fighters back into neighbouring Sudan this week, but the insurgents denied this and said they remained on Chadian soil. The soldiers are wearing distinctive coloured ribbons, which they change daily to allow them to distinguish between each other and the enemy on the battlefield. Picture taken December 14, 2006.