Home>News Center>World
         
 

UN, Sudan reach deal to disarm Arab militia in Darfur
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2004-08-06 12:21

The United Nations and Sudan have signed an agreement committing Khartoum to taking "detailed steps" in the next 30 days to disarm the Arab militia responsible for deadly attacks on black Africans in the western Darfur region so as to avert UN sanctions, a UN spokesperson said on Thursday.

The deal was reached between Jan Pronk, the UN's special representative for Sudan, and Sudanese Foreign Minister Mustafa Osman Ismail Wednesday night and has yet to be approved by the Sudanese cabinet, Denise Cook told reporters in New York.

Under the deal, the Sudanese government would also have to improve security for the 1.2 million internally displaced persons in Darfur and alleviate the humanitarian crisis unfolding in the region.

Cook quoted Pronk as expressing the hope that if the deal is endorsed by the cabinet and implemented, "the Security Council would come to the conclusion that there was indeed substantial progress and that there was no need to consider further action."

The Security Council adopted a resolution last Friday threatening to impose economic and diplomatic sanctions on Sudan if its government fails to make good its commitments to disarm the Arab militia, known as the Janjaweed, and restore security in Darfur.

The resolution requested UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan to report back to the council monthly on the progress Sudan has made.

Cook said the United Nations would not release the text of the deal until it gets through the Sudanese cabinet.

The agreement "contains detailed steps to be taken in the next 30 days on how to begin to disarm the Janjaweed and other outlawed groups, on improving security in Darfur and on addressing the humanitarian crisis," she said.

Pronk is in Khartoum attending the second meeting of the Joint Implementation Mechanism, set up by the UN and Sudan to oversee the implementation of Sudan's promises set out in a joint communique issued on July 3 as Annan wrapped up a trip to the country.

Pronk was also quoted by Cook as saying Khartoum has unblocked access for aid workers to refugee camps across Darfur and urging the international community to take advantage to deliver food, medicines and other aid.

In Khartoum, the Sudan Media Center quoted Brigadier General Jamal al-Hueres, police chief of North Darfur state, as saying that Sudan's government is going to start disarming the Arab militia in Darfur next week.

The disarmament of the militia "will be carried out both on a voluntary basis and through searches carried out by the police," he said.

Darfur, bordering Chad, has been beset by a conflict between the rebel forces, formed by local black tribes, and the government and the Janjaweed since February 2003. The militia has been accused of carrying out an ethnic cleansing campaign against black Africans in the conflict.

According to UN estimates, fighting and attacks by the Janjaweed have killed up to 30,000 people in Darfur and driven more than 1 million out of their homes. UN officials have listed the region as a site of the world's worst humanitarian crisis.



 
  Today's Top News     Top World News
 

Farmers reap macro policy rewards

 

   
 

Unsafe injections kill 390,000 prematurely

 

   
 

Japan urged to pay weapons compensation

 

   
 

Parliament exchange pushes Sino-US ties

 

   
 

Foreign capital to fund railway construction

 

   
 

Shopkeeper punished for fake milk powder

 

   
  Clashes threaten to reignite Shi'ite rising in Iraq
   
  Activity reported at al Qaeda camps
   
  Pulled from a hole, Saddam asks: 'America, why?'
   
  Japan marks Hiroshima atomic bombing
   
  Google may have issued shares illegally
   
  N.Y. mosque raided, men held in missile sting
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  Related Stories  
   
Sudanese say no to threat of intervention
   
Sudan says it accepts UN resolution on Darfur
  News Talk  
  How Kerry Can Beat Bush  
Advertisement