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Sudan: President’s Rejection of UN peace keeping Forces condemned by HRW
(SomaliNet) The Human Rights Watch (HRW) has criticized Sudan’s rejection of a UN effort to deploy an international peacekeeping force to the Darfur region saying there is no foundation to President Omar Hassan Al-Bashir’s characterization of a UN presence as a colonial intrusion in Darfur, VOA reported.
It'll do until he can think up a better reason. Kofi buys it, so that's enough...
Sudan’s president, Omar Hassan Al-Bashir in the past days rejected the deployment of a UN peace keeping force in Sudan’s war torn region of Darfur. According to HRW Deputy Director for Africa, Georgette Gagnon, UN forces deployed to Southern Sudan and other African countries play a vital role in quelling conflict and curbing violence.
Or at least in watching the festivities...
Gagnon said that African soldiers actively participate in the UN missions, which bear little resemblance to a colonial imposition. "Bashir’s statement that UN forces in Darfur would be a colonial intrusion is simply ridiculous. There are already UN forces in Southern Sudan that are monitoring implementation of the peace agreement between Bashir’s government and Southern-based rebels. There are also 14 UN peacekeeping missions in African countries in the past several years: Angola, Liberia, Libya, Mozambique, Uganda, Rwanda, and Sierra Leone, just to name a few. These forces always have contingents from African states, either as peacekeepers or military observers or as civilian police," she said.
Posted by: Fred 2006-06-24
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=157067