Tuesday, July 16, 2024

Sudan Tribune

Plural news and views on Sudan

Sudanese govt ready to accept US assistance on Darfur crisis

KHARTOUM, June 30, 2004 (IRIN) — Sudanese Foreign Minister Mustafa Uthman
Isma’il has said Sudan is ready to accept assistance from the United
States government to solve the Darfur crisis.

“We are ready to accept help,” he told reporters in the Sudanese capital,
Khartoum, at a joint press conference with US Secretary of State Colin
Powell on Tuesday evening.

Isma’il said he hoped that meetings with Powell on Wednesday would unify
both parties’ understanding of the Darfur situation and “give us an agreed
evaluation process”.

Powell, who flew to the conflict-ridden Darfur region of western Sudan on
Wednesday morning, was due to hold meetings with high-level Sudanese
officials and United Nations Secretary-General, Kofi Annan the same day.
Annan was expected to arrive in Khartoum on Wednesday morning and to fly
to Darfur on Thursday, where the UN estimates over one million people have
been displaced.

On Friday he will visit neighbouring Chad, where a further 200,000 are
camped along the shared border.

Isma’il said during talks on Wednesday, that Khartoum would “look at”
specific measures Powell had requested of the Sudanese government. “We
will look at these, including the lifting of any restrictions concerning
humanitarian aid, also more security arrangements to protect civilians and
disarm militias,” he said. “We are looking seriously before the end of the
visit of Secretary Powell to reach an agreed plan [on] how we can help
bring the situation in Darfur to normal.”

Powell told reporters that the purpose of his visit was “to be helpful”,
and that he had had “very candid” and “very direct” conversations with
Isma’il and President Umar Hasan al-Bashir.

He said he had “indicated to the minister and to the president the deep
concern that is felt in the international community” about Darfur, adding
that unless improvements were seen, “it may be necessary for the
international community to begin considering other actions – [UN] Security
Council action.”

The US government’s demands included the provision of additional security
in Darfur to protect civilians and the delivery of aid, and the removal of
all impediments to the delivery of aid.

“We also hope the government will take firm action in respect to the
process of political reconciliation. We want to see reconciliation between
the government and the opposing forces so we don’t find ourselves in a
similar situation a year or two or three from now,” he
continued.

He said they would spend time on Wednesday “examining differences,
different points of view” about the situation on the ground to try to get
“a common understanding of what needs to be done”.

Statements issued by both governments in recent weeks show a radically
different understanding of the Darfur crisis. Powell said two weeks ago
that the US government was undertaking a review to determine whether the
violence against Darfur’s civilians constituted genocide.

He added that the US administration had “every reason to believe” that
militias in Darfur were being supported by “various instrumentalities of
the Sudanese government”.

Khartoum has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing in Darfur, justifying
attacks by saying it is fighting a rebellion in the region. Bashir has
accused Western media of a campaign of lies, saying last week that
accusations of “ethnic cleansing” by some Western media were “sheer
fabrications and baseless”, the Sudanese news agency (Suna) reported.

Kofi Annan, among others, has issued warnings about the impending deaths
of hundreds of thousands of people from hunger and disease in Darfur if
aid is not allowed into the country urgently.

But Khartoum has asserted that the situation affecting internally
displaced persons (IDPs) is under control. Humanitarian Affairs Minister
Ibrahim Mahmud Hamid was quoted by Suna last week as saying that things
were “under control regarding accommodation of the displaced people in
Darfur”, adding that around 179,000 IDPs had been accommodated by the
government.

According to the US government, Khartoum has done almost nothing to rein
in the Janjawid, held responsible for most of the displacement and
killing, and is still holding up the delivery of aid in the region. “We’ve
seen, on the one hand, President Bashir’s declaration that the militias
will be disarmed. We haven’t seen any real follow-through on that. And
then, on the other hand, we’ve also heard reports that he may be
retracting that statement,” said Adam Ereli of the US State Department on
25 June.

Leave a Reply

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