African summit ends without progress on Darfur Wednesday, January 31, 2007 03:57 [IST]
Addis Ababa: The Africa Union
summit has ended without reaching a breakthrough in the continent's two most
acute crises in Darfur and Somalia.
According to diplomatic sources, UN secretary-general Ban
Ki-moon met with Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir for 90 minutes to
urge him to support a plan to deploy a joint UN-African Union (AU) peacekeeping
operation to Darfur.
The summit ended Tuesday.
In a statement released later, Ban said the Sudanese leader
had agreed to accelerate the political process and prepare for the peacekeeping
deployment.
But Bashir has yet to give his full support to the joint
deployment, which was detailed in a letter sent to him by Ban on Jan 24 containing
specifics agreed with the AU. If finally agreed by Khartoum,
thousands of UN-AU troops would be deployed in Darfur.
Ban said, "No more time can be lost. The people in Darfur have waited too long already. That is totally
unacceptable."
Chad President
Idriss Deby stressed that the situation in Darfur
had worsened last year. Chad
is now sheltering 230,000 refugees in camps in the border region.
Chad is
one of Sudan's sworn enemies
and had said it would withdraw from the AU, if Sudan were given the AU chair.
Analysts believe Sudan
is trying to prevent the deployment of a peacekeeping mission to Darfur for fear UN troops could arrest suspected war
criminals.
Sudan
considers UN forces an interference in domestic affairs although it has already
permitted a UN mission in the south of the country.
Meanwhile, Somalia's
president agreed Tuesday to hold a reconciliation conference aimed at restoring
political stability to the anarchic country torn apart by clan rivalries.
President Abdullahi Yusuf agreed to hold a conference that,
if successful, may draw the once-powerful Islamists into a power-sharing Government. |