NATO considers support for AU mission in Darfur
April 12, 2006 (BRUSSELS) — NATO began Wednesday sensitive discussions on a possible bolstering of its military presence in Sudan’s violence-scarred Darfur region, in support of a beleaguered African Union peacekeeping mission.
Rwandan soldiers deploying to the troubled Sudan’s Darfur r as part of an African Union mission, board a US Air Force C-130 heading for El Fasher, Sudan. |
The troops support a beleaguered African Union peacekeeping mission.
Ambassadors of the 26-nation alliance “started talking” about different possible options presented by military planners, said a Nato spokesperson.
Nato is currently providing air transport to the 7 000 strong AU contingent in Darfur.
Speculation is that Nato could send several hundred specialist troops into Darfur, providing logistics and command support in the transition phase between an AU and United Nations force.
Nato chief Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, who has ruled out sending combat troops into Darfur, wants alliance governments to agree quickly but no timetable for a decision has been fixed.
Three years of fighting between rebels and Khartoum-backed miltias in the Darfar region have left 300 000 people dead and two million displaced.
(ST/AFP)