Fierce clashes, shelling in North Darfur kills civilians – government
Oct 17, 2005 (KHARTOUM) — Rebels and Sudanese forces have clashed in North Darfur with artillery fire killing an unspecified number of civilians, the Sudanese government said Monday.
The African Union, which is monitoring a shaky cease-fire deal between rebels and the government in the crisis-wracked Darfur region, said rebels attack attacked an army outpost early Sunday, which was followed by “heavy bombardment” apparently from Sudanese soldiers.
The fighting took place southeast of the town of Kutum before Sudanese soldiers chased the rebel fighters from the Sudan Liberation Army into the nearby villages of Kenin and Nadi, the AU said in a statement.
But the Sudanese government accused “a group of armed movements in Darfur (of launching) waves of indiscriminate shelling” on Kutum, which resulted in “human and material damage” on Sunday and Saturday.
“The outcome was the death and injury of a group of children, women and elderly citizens,” said a statement issued by a Sudanese government delegation at Darfur peace talks in the Nigerian capital, Abuja. No casualty figures were provided.
The delegation said the rebel attack breached all AU Peace and Security Council resolutions including the cease-fire treaty aimed at curbing the Darfur conflict, which began in February 2003 and has resulted in the deaths of more than 180,000 people through violence, disease or malnutrition.
The Sudanese government will take “all necessary measures” to protect its citizens, humanitarian aid workers and AU personnel in Darfur, the statement said, adding it “demands the immediate and strong condemnation of this blind assault from both the AU and the international community.”
The Abuja talks are expected to stop Thursday and resume Nov. 15.
The AU also condemned the violence and urged restraint and cooperation from the warring sides to help it investigate the incident.
“The African Mission in the Sudan is concerned that despite repeated appeals by the international community as a whole, these incidents, attacks and counterattacks continue unabated, thus contributing to general slide towards widespread security deterioration in Darfur,” said the AU in a statement.
Kutum was the scene of clashes between SLA rebels and Sudanese soldiers last week.
On Oct. 8, SLA rebels killed three Nigerian soldiers working as AU peacekeepers and their two Sudanese civilian drivers in southern Darfur.
A day later, rebels from another Darfur group, the Justice and Equality Movement, kidnapped about 40 African Union personnel near Sudan’s border with Chad before releasing them.
The United Nations, also concerned about the worsening violence, last week ordered all nonessential staff out of West Darfur following a spike in attacks and kidnappings.
The Darfur conflict started after the two non-Arab rebel groups took up arms against the Arab-dominated government to win more political and economic rights for the region’s African tribes.
Sudan’s Arab government is accused of responding by backing Janjaweed militiamen who have carried out rapes and killings against Sudanese of African origin. The government denies backing the Janjaweed.