Official: U.N. Troops Readying for Sudan
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The United Nations is preparing to
dispatch 10,000 peacekeepers to Sudan to monitor an accord to end the
civil war there, the U.N. undersecretary-general for peacekeeping
operations said Friday. "We are gearing up to deploy 10,000 troops in
Sudan to support the North-South process," Jean-Marie Guehenno told
reporters as he prepared for talks at the Pentagon and State
Department. Guehenno said, "A breakthrough has been achieved, but it is
a fragile process," and he added that "there is potential for spoilers
in the south." The United Nations has said it plans to deploy troops
within six months, during which time the government and rebels have
committed under a Jan. 9 peace deal to set up a national power-sharing
administration with an autonomous south. At the end of a six-year
transition period, the 10 southern states will hold a referendum on
whether to become independent. Sudan's southern civil war has pitted
the government, led by Arab Muslims who dominate the north, against
rebels fighting for greater autonomy and a greater share of the
country's wealth in the mainly black Christian and animist south. The
conflict is blamed for more than 2 million deaths, primarily from
war-induced famine and disease. Africa's longest-running conflict was
sparked in February 2003 when two non-Arab African rebel groups took up
arms for more power and resources. The government responded with a
counterinsurgency campaign in which a mostly Arab militia known as the
Janjaweed has committed wide-scale abuses against tribes it says are
allied with the rebels. Disease and malnutrition are believed to have
killed more than 70,000 of the nearly 2 million displaced in Darfur
since March. [more]
- Pictured above: Photos
in a secret archive of thousands of photos and reports that document
the genocide under way in Darfur. Four of the pictures appeared in the
NY Times on February 23, 2005. According to the NYT, "the materials
were gathered by African Union monitors, who are just about the only
people able to travel widely in that part of Sudan." The writer also
states "this African Union archive is classified, but it was shared
with me by someone who believes that Americans will be stirred if they
can see the consequences of their complacency. The
photo [above] was taken in the village of Hamada on Jan. 15, right
after a Sudanese government-backed militia, the janjaweed, attacked it
and killed 107 people. One of them was this little boy. I'm not showing
the photo of his older brother, about 5 years old, who lay beside him
because the brother had been beaten so badly that nothing was left of
his face. And alongside the two boys was the corpse of their mother." [more] IS this for real yall? The NY Times has had a real propaganda feel to it lately. - BW