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| UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan at Oslo
donors meeting April. 11.
(Xinhua/AFP) | STOCKHOLM, April 12 (Xinhuanet) --
International donors have pledged 4.5 billion US dollars to help rebuild Sudan
while the United States warned that the aid is dependent on the situation in
Sudan's Darfur region, reports from Oslo, Norway, said Tuesday.
"This conference has pledged 4.5 billion dollars for
2005, 2006and 2007," Norway's Minister for Development Aid Hilde Frafjord
Johnson said at the closing of the donors' conference held in the Norwegian
capital.
She said the pledges had exceeded the requested 3.6
billion dollars. The United Nations had sought 1 billion dollars for Sudanin
2005 while the African country itself had requested 2.6 billiondollars for the
2005-2007 period.
Conflicts erupted in Sudan's troubled western region
of Darfur in February 2003 after the Sudan Liberation Army and the Movement of
Equality and Justice took up arms against the government.
A peace accord signed in January ended the 21-year
civil war insouthern Sudan, but violence continues unabated in a separate
conflict in Darfur.
The conflicts have left tens of thousands of people
dead and many others displaced and now aid is needed to relieve hunger, help
refugees and build infrastructure.
John Garang, head of southern Sudan's former rebels,
said he was satisfied with the pledges made at Tuesday's conference.
However, Johnson, the Norwegian minister who chaired
the conference, cautioned that collecting the exact amounts promised from donors
could be difficult.
The United States, a major donor which has promised
to provide between 1 and 2 billion dollars in aid over the next two years, has
conditioned financial support to Sudan's north-south peace deal on resolving the
conflict in Darfur region, US Deputy Secretary of State Robert Zoellick said.
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