US threatens sanctions over Janjawid militias
NAIROBI, July 08, 2004 (IRIN) — The United States government has threatened to
impose sanctions on Sudan very soon, unless it disarms militia blamed for
most of the atrocities in the western region of Darfur. “We are talking
about days,” the US ambassador to the United Nations, John Danforth, told
reporters in New York on Wednesday.
“What we wonder is whether the government of Sudan is just using more
words, more promises, with the view that delay means more death,” Danforth
was quoted by international news agencies as saying. “The government of
Sudan is clearly on a short leash.”
Danforth spoke as the UN Security Council started considering a draft
resolution proposed by the US calling on the Sudanese government to fulfil
the commitment it had made publicly to end military attacks and to protect
civilians in Darfur.
Calling for “sustained pressure” on the Sudanese government to find a
solution to the Darfur crisis, Council members “reserved the right to take
tougher action if Khartoum does not match its commitments to end human
rights abuses and restrictions on aid workers”, UN News reported. It said
the 15-member Council would consider adopting a resolution on Sudan “in
the coming days”.
The current chairman, Ambassador Mihnea Ioan Motoc of Romania, said the
Council wanted to bring pressure to bear on the Sudanese government “to
promote progress” in Darfur, where Janjawid militias had driven more than
a million people from their home villages “in a wave of ethnic
displacement”.
Motoc welcomed Khartoum’s 3 July pledge to undertake measures, including
the disarming of the Janjawid, the lifting of obstacles to the relief
efforts, and bringing to justice of perpetrators of human rights abuses.
He said the Council was studying the draft resolution, and further action
“depended on whether the Sudanese government was meeting the targets and
promises it made”.
UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, briefed the Council via a satellite link
from the Kenyan capital, Nairobi, and urged it to adopt a resolution “as
soon as possible to help bring an end to the deadly violence and ethnic
displacement wracking” the Darfur region.
POTENTIAL HIGH TOLL
The UN Emergency Coordinator, Jan Egeland, warned of a potentially massive
death toll if Khartoum did not take steps to end fighting with two rebel
groups and to disarm and demobilise the mainly Arab militias.
“It is so vulnerable now that if there is an outbreak of renewed fighting,
the whole programme of our humanitarian lifeline will fold immediately,
and hundreds of thousands of people may die,” Egeland said.
He was quoted by UN News as saying that the UN wanted a resolution with as
much as concrete detail as possible, to help “ensure that armed,
government-allied Janjawid militias stop attacking villages and killing
and raping civilians”.
On Tuesday, a UN spokeswoman, Marie Okabe, had told reporters in New York
that despite the government’s 3 July pledge, armed men had continued to
attack humanitarian convoys in Darfur. “Military personnel, uniformed men
and ‘unidentified persons on camels’ stopped and attacked clearly marked
convoys of humanitarian workers in the west and north of Sudan’s volatile
Darfur region,” Okabe said.
She said both the Sudanese government and the rebel Sudan Liberation Army
had increased the number of road checkpoints in Darfur, thereby slowing
down the flow of humanitarian assistance for those affected by the
conflict. In Southern Darfur, civilians were still being displaced by
tribal fighting and attacks by Janjawid militias, she added.
HRW, FRANCE URGE PROTECTION OF CIVILIANS
Human Rights Watch (HRW), in a letter on Wednesday, urged the Security
Council to “take immediate steps to protect civilians in Darfur and impose
sanctions on Sudanese officials as well as government-backed militias”.
“Disarming the Janjawid would be a crucial step in protecting civilians in
Darfur, but Khartoum has flagrantly broken its earlier promises to
neutralise them,” Jemera Rone, the Sudan researcher for HRW’s Africa
division said. “The Sudanese government continues to use these militias to
carry out ‘ethnic cleansing’. Now the Security Council must be prepared to
intervene with more muscle.”
It was not immediately possible to obtain comment from the Sudanese
government on the letter, but according to HRW, government forces and the
Janjawid were “responsible for crimes against humanity [and] war crimes”.
“Although the Sudanese government continues to deny its role in arming and
supporting the militias, the evidence of hundreds of eyewitnesses and
government documents testify to official responsibility for their
recruitment, arming and coordination with government troops and air
support,” HRW said. “Sudanese government officials should also be subject
to travel and arms sanctions.”
HRW also called for an international commission of inquiry into the crimes
against humanity and war crimes perpetrated in Darfur, and for active
monitoring by African Union and
international human rights monitors of ceasefire violations, including
attacks on civilians.
In Paris, the French Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, Renaud
Muselier, urged the Sudanese government to “remove” weapons from the armed
militias in Darfur. “They (the Janjawid militias) must be willing to lay
down their weapons, and if they are not, they will have to be removed,”
Muselier was quoted saying by the French News Agency.
“The Janjawid militias have had a certain freedom of action and have
committed totally unacceptable violent acts and human rights violations on
a massive scale. The violence must not go unpunished,” he added.
MINISTERS IN DARFUR
Meanwhile, a delegation of Sudanese ministers arrived in Al-Fashir, the
capital of Northern Darfur State, on Wednesday to prepare for the
resettlement of those displaced by the conflict, according to
international news agencies.
The delegation was led by Humanitarian Affairs Minister Ibrahim Mahmud
Hamid, and included Ahmad Harun, the minister of state at the interior
ministry, and Muhammad Yusuf Abdullah, the minister of state at the
humanitarian affairs ministry.
Fighting between the government and rebels, which first broke out in
Darfur early last year, has displaced about two million people, with up to
200,000 seeking refuge in neighbouring Chad. The UN and other aid agencies
have described the conflict in Darfur as “the world’s worst humanitarian
crisis”.