Thursday, November 21, 2024

Sudan Tribune

Plural news and views on Sudan

Libya to host international conference on Darfur

April 13, 2007 (TRIPOLI) — Libya will host an international conference on the war-torn Sudanese region of Darfur later this month, a senior Libyan official said on Friday.

“A conference on Darfur will take place on April 28 with representatives of the United States, Britain, Sudan, Chad, Eritrea, the African Union and European Union,” Libya’s deputy foreign minister Ali Abdelsalam Triki told reporters.

He did not specify the level of participation but said US Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte was expected in Libya on April 17 for talks focusing on Sudan and Somalia, both riven by bloody conflicts.

Negroponte is currently in Sudan pressing Khartoum to accept a hybrid peacekeeping force of UN and African Union forces to stem violence that has steadily escalated since the Darfur conflict erupted in 2003.

The UN estimates that at least 200,000 people have been killed in the conflict which threatens to involve neighbouring Chad and which the under-equipped 7,000 troops of the African Union have been unable to contain..

Negroponte’s visit comes after the United States held off on a decision to impose unilateral sanctions against Sudan to give UN chief Ban Ki-moon a last chance to persuade Khartoum to allow UN peacekeepers into Darfur.

Ban on April 2 asked for an additional two to four weeks to pressure Sudan’s opposition to the UN’s planned deployment of a joint force of some 20,000 troops to Darfur before turning to sanctions.

Khartoum, whose troops and allied Janjawed militia have been blamed by aid agencies for widespread killing, rapes and burning of villages in Darfur, has opposed any UN military force deployment, other than logistical.

On Monday after talks involving UN, AU and Sudanese government officials in Addis Ababa over a three-stage plan for international peacekeeping in Darfur, Sudan agreed to allow the UN to start sending reinforcements to the AU troops.

Ban said he would hold key talks on Monday and Tuesday with AU Commission chairman Alpha Oumar Konare on the final phase of the plan expected to culminate in the deployment of a 20,000-strong joint UN-AU force in Darfur.

(AFP)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *