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Janjaweed onslaught forces UN to quit Darfur
Telegraph ^ | 03/18/05 | David Blair

Posted on 03/17/2005 4:45:32 PM PST by Pikamax

Janjaweed onslaught forces UN to quit Darfur By David Blair, Africa Correspondent (Filed: 18/03/2005)

Threats of violence forced the United Nations to evacuate large areas of war-torn Darfur yesterday, underlining Sudan's failure to curb the notorious janjaweed militia.

UN aid workers helping desperate refugees were withdrawn from outlying areas of Western Darfur province and brought to the safety of the local capital, El Geneina.

Gunmen from the janjaweed, which translates as "demons on horseback", have issued new threats to aid workers and food convoys.

The janjaweed, who have mounted a brutal campaign against Darfur's black African tribes, were the subject of a special UN resolution passed last July.

The mandatory resolution demanded that the janjaweed be brought under control by last Sept 1. Yet more than six months later their threats have obliged the UN to remove its staff.

"The janjaweed militia have said that they will now target all foreigners and all UN humanitarian convoys, so we have withdrawn all people to El Geneina," said Jan Pronk, the UN's envoy in Sudan.

Some 44 staff have been moved so far and will now stay in El Geneina, the only area of Western Darfur considered safe, until further notice.

The UN and other agencies took the drastic action after janjaweed gunmen waylaid UN lorries delivering aid to Darfur's refugee camps. Their Sudanese drivers were told that all foreigners would now be targeted.

Mr Pronk suggested that the renewed threat might be linked to an order from the provincial governor for the janjaweed to return vehicles given to them by the regime last year.

The Khartoum government has always denied supporting the janjaweed and President Omar al-Bashir has repeatedly called them "bandits".

But a UN investigation concluded that the regime had armed and supplied the janjaweed in order to carry out a brutal counter-insurgency campaign, involving countless attacks on the black African tribes accused of backing Darfur's rebels.

In two years of fighting, about two million people have been forced to flee their villages for squalid refugee camps, with 200,000 pouring over the border into neighbouring Chad.

War-induced starvation and disease have killed at least 180,000 people, with tens of thousands more dying at the hands of rebels from the Sudan Liberation Army, the janjaweed, or government forces.

All sides have broken a ceasefire agreed last April. A second UN resolution passed last September held out the prospect of imposing oil sanctions on Sudan unless the violence ended. But China has large interests in Sudan's oil industry, which produces 345,000 barrels every day, and has pledged to block any embargo.

The only outside forces present in Darfur are about 3,000 African troops protecting military observers from the African Union, an alliance of all 53 countries on the continent. They have neither the training nor the numbers nor the mandate to protect civilians.

The latest fighting in Western Darfur claimed about nine lives on Wednesday. Rebels accused government forces of attacking two villages in the Jabel Moun area.

The African Union's envoy to Sudan cited these latest clashes as evidence that security in Darfur is worsening.

Baba Gana Kingibe said he was "disappointed" by the renewed fighting, adding: "Unfortunately in the last one week the situation has deteriorated."

The UN's latest resolution on Darfur has been stalled by fierce disagreement between the Security Council's permanent members. The present draft calls for those accused of war crimes in Darfur to be tried before the International Criminal Court in the Hague.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: genocide; janjaweed; sudan

1 posted on 03/17/2005 4:45:32 PM PST by Pikamax
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To: Pikamax

I guess the UN will have to seek cheap hookers elsewhere now.


2 posted on 03/17/2005 4:48:07 PM PST by evolved_rage (A $500 hammer then would require $10,000 of SOX documentation today)
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To: evolved_rage
Another stellar accomplishment from the United Nothings. God, I never thought I'd want the League of Nations back so bad.
3 posted on 03/17/2005 4:50:59 PM PST by Killborn (Happy St. Paddy's Day!!! :))
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To: Pikamax

"The mandatory resolution demanded that the janjaweed be brought under control by last Sept 1. Yet more than six months later their threats have obliged the UN to remove its staff."


How dare they ignore a "mandatory resolution". Don't they know who the UN is?


4 posted on 03/17/2005 4:52:24 PM PST by cripplecreek (I'm apathetic but really don't care.)
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To: Pikamax

Where's Kofi? Where's Chirac? Where's that Italian commie-ette?

Once again, these fools have NO PROBLEM -- ZERO, ZIP, NADA, BUBKUS -- with genocide as long as non-whites are the perpetrators.

I respectfully request some time alone in the back room with each of them...


5 posted on 03/17/2005 4:52:54 PM PST by Zhangliqun (What are intellectuals for but to complexify the obvious?)
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To: Pikamax

>>>The present draft calls for those accused of war crimes in Darfur to be tried before the International Criminal Court in the Hague.<<<<<<

Bwahahahahahaaaoh god I cant help it, Bwahahahaahaha Trial in the Hague is it? Bwahahahahahaha, Who is going to arrest them or are they supposed to turn themselves in , Bwahahahaa
Maybe if they can get the UN troops to stop raping the women there long enough they can retreat with Honor , Bwahahaahhaa


6 posted on 03/17/2005 5:00:13 PM PST by sgtbono2002
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To: Pikamax
a special UN resolution passed last July ... demanded that the janjaweed be brought under control by last Sept 1.

Well, that ultimatum was ignored ... now what? Oh ... I know ... let's pass another resolution.

7 posted on 03/17/2005 5:09:07 PM PST by layman (Card Carrying Infidel)
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To: Pikamax

Is there ANYTHING, besides stealing aid money from starving Iraqi children and raping 10 year old girls in the Congo, that this disgusting outfit is able to do? Stop funding this rat hole and throw the bums out of the US!


8 posted on 03/17/2005 5:12:08 PM PST by kittymyrib
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To: cripplecreek

Janjaweed. Is that like Ganjaweed?


9 posted on 03/17/2005 5:31:32 PM PST by aroostook war (Happy Saint Patrick's Day!)
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To: Pikamax
The Khartoum government has always denied supporting the janjaweed and President Omar al-Bashir has repeatedly called them "bandits".

Sudan admits that it is not in effective control of this territory, which is settled by black Africans who have no part in Sudan's government or Sudanese society.

The right answer is to arm and train Africans to defend themselves, and to give sufficient support for them to clear their region of bandits.

Quietly tell Khartoum that they can either like it or see their oilfields destroyed.

10 posted on 03/17/2005 5:42:35 PM PST by marron
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To: Pikamax

Sounds like it's time for the UN to have an emergency high level meeting, lasting at least two days at the nearest 5 star hotel.


11 posted on 03/17/2005 5:45:41 PM PST by black_diamond
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To: Pikamax
"In two years of fighting, about two million people have been forced to flee their villages for squalid refugee camps, with 200,000 pouring over the border into neighbouring Chad...War-induced starvation and disease have killed at least 180,000 people, with tens of thousands more dying at the hands of rebels from the Sudan Liberation Army, the janjaweed, or government forces."

Let's see;
2,000,000 fled but presumably OK,
180,000 starving 'cause times are bad,
"Tens" of thousands - maybe 60,000(?) - dead at the hands of three different warring groups;
So the janajweed are "only" responsible for maybe 20,000 dead?

No wonder the UN doesn't think it's a punishable crime - shared responsibility and only about one percent attributed to actual, oh, say - murder, they're practically angels.

12 posted on 03/17/2005 6:18:48 PM PST by norton (build a wall and post the rules at the gate)
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