SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: KLP who wrote (147359)10/8/2004 7:50:47 AM
From: jttmab  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
Tell the Sudan minister to clean up his country from the Islamist terrorists, and have him ask the UN for help. I'm sure France will be willing to help, aren't you?

You're on top of the situation. France sent troops quite some time ago; France was the first country to commit troops. African Union troops are there. German has been sending aid. Britain has been front and center for quite a while. All under the auspices of the UN. There's more that's happening and more countries that have been sending aid.

The aid workers in Sudan are puzzled as to why the US is calling it genocide now that the situation has improved. Months ago it would have made sense. The situation isn't good by any means, but the aid workers have indicated it's no worse now than in some other areas of Africa.

jttmab



To: KLP who wrote (147359)10/8/2004 8:03:31 AM
From: jttmab  Respond to of 281500
 
Sudan responds to British demands over Darfur
Sudan-UK, Politics, 10/8/2004

Khartoum vowed to fulfill some of the demands put by the British prime minister Tony Blair pertinent to the situation in the troubled Darfur district which suffers a grave humanitarian crisis.

A statement by the Sudanese foreign ministry said that Khartoum will respond to some of the British demands on improving the security and humanitarian conditions in Darfur, proposed by Blair during his meeting in Khartoum with the Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir and his deputy Ali Othman Taha.

The statement explained that Khartoum abided by finding out a peaceful solution for the conflict in Darfur by negotiations and dialogue.

For its part, Britain stressed that Sudan agreed to increase the number of the African union observers in Darfur and committed to cooperation and complying to the African Union and UN Security Council resolutions.

A statement issued by the British foreign office said the two countries agreed on the need that the conflicting sides in Darfur will abide by the international and humanitarian law and to facilitate access of humanitarian aid and guarantee the activities of the rescue teams.

For their part, British officials accompanying Blair said that the Sudanese president agreed on all points proposed to him, stressing that the statement of the Sudanese foreign ministry did not mention certain important British demands like dismantling the weapons of the Jangaweid militias and bringing its members before the judiciary. A British official said that the "Sudanese agreed to the five demands raised by Blair." Blair stressed during his short visit to Sudan that his government wants from its Sudanese peer to reach a comprehensive peace agreement in the south and north of Sudan by the end of the current year.

arabicnews.com



To: KLP who wrote (147359)10/8/2004 8:10:16 AM
From: jttmab  Respond to of 281500
 
Meanwhile, back in the US....

WASHINGTON, Oct 7 (AFP) -- The House of Representatives, by a vote of 412 to 3, approved a resolution condemning the violence in Sudan's Darfur region as genocide and calling for sanctions on the Khartoum government

The "Comprehensive Peace in Sudan Act" calls upon US President George W. Bush to freeze the assets of senior Sudanese officials and calls for concerted UN action against the Sudanese government.

The bill also provides humanitarian and development aid for Sudanese refugees.

Congressman Tom Tancredo, one of the chief backers of the bill, praised the vote.

"This is another important step in bringing an end to the conflict and suffering in this wartorn region," said Tancredo, a member of the House International Relations Committee and the Africa Subcommittee.

"America must lead the way in resolving this tragic humanitarian and human rights disaster," he said.

"This is the first time we have declared genocide while it is happening. How we respond at this critical juncture has implications for the future of international peace and security."

The bill now must be reconciled with similar legislation passed last month by the US Senate.

sudantribune.com

Tancredo doesn't know what's going on either. Can't you see Blair sitting in Sudan and Jack Straw passing him a note saying that the US House just passed a resolution on Sudan that "American must lead the way"....after the House and Senate bills have been reconciled. Wonder if they are going to do that in today or wait until the next session.

Perhaps you want to throw in a derogatory comment on Tony Blair and the UK for your contribution.

jttmab



To: KLP who wrote (147359)10/8/2004 8:22:58 AM
From: jttmab  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
Meanwhile...back in the refugee camps....

Schools open in Sudanese refugee camps

Liz Ford
Friday October 8, 2004

Children who have been forced to flee their homes in the Darfur region of Sudan are being encouraged to attend school in their refugee camps.

Around 60,000 Sudanese children of school age have settled in 10 camps in neighbouring Chad following fighting between the Janjaweed militia and the Sudanese Liberation Army.

This week, 26,000 refugee children began school in their camps supported by Unicef, which has helped train teachers and provided tents for classrooms, textbooks, chalk, exercise books and other educational material. Pupils will follow the Chadian school calendar, but will be taught under the Sudanese curriculum.

The new school year began on Monday and a ceremony to mark the occasion was held in the village of Farchana, about 60km from the Sudanese border, where the first refugee camp opened.

Some 12,500 Sudanese refugees have settled in the camp, including 2,474 children aged between six and 12.

According to Unicef, the school enrolment rate in Darfur is poor and many refugee children have never previously attended classes. Working in partnership with other international organisations, it hopes the camp schools will help widen access to education, and press upon parents its benefits.

More than 120 million children around the world still do not attend school. More than half are girls, and 83% live in sub-Saharan Africa, south and east Asia and the Pacific. In sub-Saharan Africa the number of girls left out of school each year rose from 20 million in 1990 to 24 million in 2002.....

education.guardian.co.uk



To: KLP who wrote (147359)10/8/2004 8:24:55 AM
From: jttmab  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
Meanwhile back in Sudan....

The World Health Organisation said it will redouble efforts to vaccinate Sudanese children against polio following an outbreak of the disease in the war-torn western region of Darfur.

Eleven cases of the disease have been detected this year, including in the capital, the WHO said.

"Armed conflict has contributed to the re-infection by the wild polio virus in Darfur that has now spread to the capital city, Khartoum", said WHO Representative Guido Sabatinelli on Wednesday.

A WHO statement said Sudan had been polio-free since April 2001, but that cross-border movement between Chad and Sudan re-introduced the virus.

It said the "conflict in the Darfur region ... where the first polio case made its appearance, prevented the immunization of all children under the age of five in earlier campaigns."...

terra.net.lb



To: KLP who wrote (147359)10/8/2004 8:27:33 AM
From: jttmab  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 281500
 
Let's slam the UN again, shall we Karen...

UN food relief agency helps 1.3 million people in Sudan's Darfur region

6 October 2004 – The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) last month fed more than 1.3 million people in the beleaguered Darfur region of western Sudan, taking advantage of the end of the rainy season to distribute its biggest amount of aid since the humanitarian crisis there began last year.

WFP officials gave out 21,535 tons of food during September, using aircraft, trucks and trains to deliver the aid to all three states in the impoverished Darfur region, which is roughly equivalent to the size of France.

The agency said in a statement issued in the capital Khartoum that it had expected to reach about 1.2 million Sudanese - mostly internally displaced persons (IDPs) - for the month. But better weather conditions and more streamlined organization meant 1,336,992 people received food.

WFP Emergency Coordinator for Darfur Carlos Veloso said the September performance has given a boost to the agency's goal of reaching two million people by the end of the year.

"Insecurity and especially banditry along trucking routes continue to present us with problems, but our ability to meet the needs of the hungry is improving," he said.

The total was also boosted because some deliveries scheduled for August were delayed because heavy rains then meant many roads were blocked. Those routes have now opened and WFP's fleet of trucks has also expanded.

WFP has received $211 million of the $252 million it requested to finance its Darfur operations this year.

About 1.45 million Sudanese are IDPs and another 200,000 live as refugees in neighbouring Chad because of brutal attacks against civilians by Janjaweed militias and fighting between Government forces and two rebel groups.

Meanwhile, the Independent Expert on the human rights situation in Chad, Monica Pinto, will tomorrow begin her first official visit to the country.

Ms. Pinto, who will spend 10 days touring Chad, is slated to meet senior Government officials in the capital N'Djamena, including President Idriss Deby. She also expects to meet human rights activists and inspect the Sudanese refugee camps in eastern Chad.

un.org



To: KLP who wrote (147359)10/8/2004 8:29:09 AM
From: jttmab  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
America..."leading the way"

Sudan Agrees to Blair Demands for Peace Initiatives (Update5)

Oct. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir agreed in talks with U.K. Prime Minister Tony Blair to demands for more peacekeeping troops to protect 1.5 million refugees in the western Darfur region of the oil-rich African nation.

A Sudanese Foreign Ministry statement, issued after Blair talked with Bashir in Khartoum, said Sudan will accept an increase from 380 African Union troops to 3,500 ``or more.'' Humanitarian protocols, which guarantee aid workers free access and movement, may be signed ``immediately,'' the statement said.

``We need several thousand'' peacekeeping troops in Sudan, Blair said at a press conference after delivering a list of five demands to Bashir. ``It is important that the Sudanese government give their full cooperation.''

In fighting between government forces and rebels in the last two years, about 100,000 people have been killed and 1.5 million chased from their homes. The United Nations says the refugees in Darfur currently pose the world's biggest humanitarian crisis.

In addition to meeting Blair's demands for accepting more peacekeepers and honoring humanitarian protocols, the Sudanese ministry said the nation's troops won't conduct ``offensive operations'' and refugees will be repatriated.

Peace Accord

A peace accord between the Sudanese government in the north and Sudan People's Liberation Army in the south will be concluded ``as soon as possible,'' the ministry said in response to Blair's demand for a settlement by the end of next year. They have been warring since 1983 over how to divide the country's resources including oil.

``The UN's power to use sanctions or any other method of compliance remains,'' Blair said. ``It would be better if we could make progress. The important thing is not merely to get the statement of intent but to see that it's seen through.''

Blair and Bashir met in the Republican Palace, the seat of the colonial government from 1898 until independence in 1956. After the meeting, Blair flew to Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, for a conference tomorrow of the Commission on Africa.

The U.K. will accelerate payment of the remaining 18 million pounds ($32 million) of Britain's 65 million-pound budget this year for to aid Sudan, Blair said. Next year's budget will increase to 100 million pounds.

Outside Troops

Asked whether the U.K. may commit troops to Sudan, Blair said, ``I don't think there is any desire on the part of the African Union for outside troops, be they British or American, to come in.''

Jan Pronk, the UN envoy to Sudan, said yesterday in New York he was concerned that the 53-nation African Union may be unable to deploy 4,000 soldiers until early next year for security in Darfur, the Associated Press said. U.S. Ambassador John Danforth said monitors are needed ``as quickly as they can get there,'' the report said.

Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo said last week that 5,000 troops can be mobilized quickly if hundreds of millions of dollars can be provided.

Pronk declined to comment on the possibility of the UN or other nations providing a ``bridging facility'' to get troops to Sudan faster, the AP said.

``We will of course help, logistically, financially,'' Blair said. ``We will help them gear up. But my very strong understanding is there isn't a desire for British troops to come here.''

Barbara Stocking, director of Oxfam, which sponsors aid workers in Darfur, said, ``While Blair's short trip alone will not directly save lives, the prime minister can help thousands by shifting British policy up a gear. This concrete action will directly help stop the violence.''

`Difficult Challenges'

``Cooperation with the government has improved significantly, access has improved, but we still face difficult challenges,'' said Greg Barrow, spokesman for the UN World Food program.

Armed bandits have been stopping trucks to take food bound for refugees, he said. ``It's very difficult to establish if our trucks get stopped who is to blame.''

The UN has demanded that Sudan disarm the Arab Janjaweed militia, which Bashir has said is beyond the control of government troops. The Janjaweed, who attacked government army bases and police stations in 2003 to protest that they weren't getting their share of the nation's oil riches, is blamed for many of the troubles in Darfur.

Barrow said the UN food program has a $204 million budget this year to feed 1.2 million people in Darfur, and ``we're hoping to expand the program to feed 2 million by the end of the year.''

Crisis `to Continue'

In addition to the 1.5 million refugees in Darfur, the UN estimates that 200,000 more have fled to relief camps in neighboring Chad. Barrow said, ``This crisis is going to continue to the end of next year and perhaps beyond.''

While Britain backed the U.S.-sponsored a resolution against Sudan, adopted by the Security Council on Sept. 18, the U.K. has declined to join the U.S. in accusing Sudan of ``genocide.'' Instead, the U.K. has left it to the UN to investigate the matter.

The Security Council raised the possibility of imposing sanctions on the nation's oil industry unless Bashir's government makes Darfur safe. China threatened to veto the resolution condemning Sudan, saying sanctions weren't needed, and then joined Russia, Pakistan and Algeria in abstaining from a vote.

Oil Exports

Sudan relies on oil revenue for three-quarters of its export earnings. It started exporting petroleum in 1999 and plans to boost production to 500,000 barrels a day by the end of next year from 345,000 barrels a day in June. China's state oil companies are the biggest investors in Sudan's oil industry.

The U.S. banned trade with Sudan in 1997, and in 2002 barred Americans from doing business with the Greater Nile Petroleum Operating Co., a group that taps Sudanese crude and ships it to overseas customers.

Except for Sweden's Lundin Petroleum AB, western oil companies have pulled out of Sudan as violence flared between government and rebel troops during the past two decades. Chevron Corp. explored in the region from the 1960s to 1985. Talisman Energy Inc. of Canada sold out in 2003 as did OMV AG of Austria. Total SA of France suspended work in Sudan but retains rights to drill, according to the U.S. Department of Energy.

China National United, or Chinaoil, and China National Chemicals, known as Sinochem, were awarded contracts in August to buy half of the Sudanese Nile Blend crude oil for sale in the fourth quarter.

Drilling Projects

Those companies, controlled by the Chinese government, also have stakes in drilling projects in Sudan and in a pipeline that exports most of the nation's crude. Oil & Natural Gas Corp. of New Delhi works in Sudan.

Sudan also needs outside help to expand petroleum refineries at Port Sudan on the Red Sea and Khartoum in the center of the nation. Those plants, with a combined capacity of 72,000 barrels a day, produce gasoline for cars and butane for cooking. The government wants each plant to produce 100,000 barrels a day.

With a population of 39 million, Sudan has an annual gross domestic product of about $15.6 billion and external debts of $21 billion. Britain allocated 62.5 million pounds ($112 million) of aid for Sudan this year.

quote.bloomberg.com



To: KLP who wrote (147359)10/8/2004 8:31:12 AM
From: jttmab  Respond to of 281500
 
America .... "leading the way"

Tories back intervention in Africa

Matthew Tempest, political correspondent, in Bournemouth
Wednesday October 6, 2004

The Conservatives today called for greater military commitment to Africa, with British forces implementing a no fly zone in the Darfur region of Sudan and, if necessary, backing UN monitors in Zimbabwe.

With publication of the Iraq Survey Group (ISG) report due tonight, the shadow foreign secretary, Michael Ancram, attacked the Tony Blair over a failure to plan for the peace in post-Saddam Iraq and for leading Britain into a "dangerous half-war", but he stepped back from accusing him of lying.

Mr Ancram instead laid the blame for "a successful war becoming a shaky and danger-filled peace" at Mr Blair's door.

Speaking during the foreign affairs debate at the party conference in Bournemouth, Mr Ancram said one of the first actions of a Tory government would be to get a UN security council resolution to send monitors and observers into Zimbabwe.

If this was unacceptable to Robert Mugabe, the Zimbabwean president, enforcement by British troops could not be ruled out, his press aides confirmed.

Earlier Alan Duncan, the new shadow international development secretary, criticised Mr Blair's current trip to Africa, accusing him of posing in "stunts and photo-ops [that] don't feed the world's poor".

He called for an increase in the African Union force in the Sudan, with a pledge to provide logistical support and even policing a no-fly zone.

Mr Duncan said: "His trip to Africa lets him pose, but if he won't call the horror in Darfur in Sudan by its right name - genocide - how can we expect effective action that will save lives?"...

politics.guardian.co.uk



To: KLP who wrote (147359)10/8/2004 8:33:59 AM
From: jttmab  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
US 'Hyping' Darfur Genocide Fears
By Peter Beaumont
Observer
October 3, 2004

American warnings that Darfur is heading for an apocalyptic humanitarian catastrophe have been widely exaggerated by administration officials, it is alleged by international aid workers in Sudan. Washington's desire for a regime change in Khartoum has biased their reports, it is claimed.

The government's aid agency, USAID, says that between 350,000 and a million people could die in Darfur by the end of the year. Other officials, including Secretary of State Colin Powell, have accused the Sudanese government of presiding over a 'genocide' that could rival those in Bosnia and Rwanda. But the account has been comprehensively challenged by eyewitness reports from aid workers and by a new food survey of the region. The nutritional survey of Sudan's Darfur region, by the UN World Food Programme, says that although there are still high levels of malnutrition among under-fives in some areas, the crisis is being brought under control.

'It's not disastrous,' said one of those involved in the WFP survey, 'although it certainly was a disaster earlier this year, and if humanitarian assistance declines, this will have very serious negative consequences.' The UN report appears to confirm food surveys conducted by other agencies in Darfur which also stand in stark contrast to the dire US descriptions of the food crisis.

The most dramatic came from Andrew Natsios, head of USAID, who told UN officials: 'We estimate right now, if we get relief in we'll lose a third of a million people and, if we don't, the death rates could be dramatically higher, approaching a million people.' A month later, a second senior official, Roger Winter, USAID's assistant administrator, briefed foreign journalists in Washington that an estimated 30,000 people had been killed during the on-going crisis in Darfur, with another 50,000 deaths from malnutrition and disease, largely among the huge populations fleeing the violence. He described the emergency as 'humanitarian disaster of the first magnitude'.

By 9 September Powell was in front of the Congressional Foreign Relations Committee accusing Sudan of 'genocide', a charge rejected by officials of both the European and African Unions and also privately by British officials. 'I've been to a number of camps during my time here,' said one aid worker, 'and if you want to find death, you have to go looking for it. It's easy to find very sick and under-nourished children at the therapeutic feeding centres, but that's the same wherever you go in Africa.'

Another aid worker told The Observer : 'It suited various governments to talk it all up, but they don't seem to have thought about the consequences. I have no idea what Colin Powell's game is, but to call it genocide and then effectively say, "Oh, shucks, but we are not going to do anything about that genocide" undermines the very word "genocide".'

While none of the aid workers and officials interviewed by The Observer denied there was a crisis in Darfur - or that killings, rape and a large-scale displacement of population had taken place - many were puzzled that it had become the focus of such hyperbolic warnings when there were crises of similar magnitude in both northern Uganda and eastern Congo.

Concern about USAID's role as an honest broker in Darfur have been mounting for months, with diplomats as well as aid workers puzzled over its pronouncements and one European diplomat accusing it of 'plucking figures from the air'. Under the Bush administration, the work of USAID has become increasingly politicised. But over Sudan, in particular, two of its most senior officials have long held strong personal views. Both Natsios, a former vice-president of the Christian charity World Vision, and Winter have long been hostile to the Sudanese government.

globalpolicy.org



To: KLP who wrote (147359)10/8/2004 9:42:27 AM
From: jttmab  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 281500
 
It just occurred to me that you wouldn't be able to find the story on the French troops without help. This goes back to 1 Aug; it's old news. What was that phrase from the House..."America must lead the way."....Yes, that was it.

French troops begin Darfur aid mission

August 1, 2004 - 10:28AM

French soldiers stationed in Chad began airlifting aid to the border with Sudan's Darfur region today, as Sudan reluctantly agreed to accept a UN Security Council resolution threatening international action unless atrocities in Darfur are halted within 30 days.

After President Jacques Chirac ordered a mobilisation to help the 1.2 million people driven from their homes by Sudanese troops and Arab militia known as Janjaweed, French forces in Chad began flying relief supplies to the border town of Abeche and prepared to send 200 troops to secure Chad's eastern frontier with Darfur, according to army colonel Philippe Charles. ....

theage.com.au