Annan to travel to Sudan’s troubled Darfur region
WASHINGTON, May 23 (AFP) — UN Secretary General Kofi Annan will travel this week to Sudan, to witness the status of relief efforts in the troubled Darfur region and to meet with Sudanese government representatives in Khartoum, United Nations officials said Monday.
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan (L) speaks to Sudanese refugee women at the Zamzam camp in northern Darfur, July 1, 2004. (Reuters) . |
“The Secretary-General is returning to Darfur to see firsthand one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises and the progress being made in meeting the people’s needs on the ground,” said UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric, who said Annan was due in to arrive in the Sudan on Friday.
“By going to Darfur, he hopes to rally support for the AU’s (African Union’s) security presence, revitalize the AU-mediated political process, and focus attention on the need to sustain the vital and massive UN-led humanitarian assistance activities underway there,” Dujarric said.
The visit will be the second to Darfur by the UN secretary general, who first traveled there last summer.
Before traveling to Sudan, Annan was to stop in Ethiopia where he was to co-chair a donors’ conference to help bolster the AU’s peace force in Darfur. An African Union force monitors the fragile ceasefire in Sudan’s western region.
Annan and AU executive chairman Alpha Oumar Konare will jointly lead the meeting in the Ethiopian capital of Addis Ababa on May 26, which will be aimed at rounding up needed assistance for the AU’s Darfur mission.