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| NATO General-Secretary Jaap de Hoop
Scheffer addresses a news conference at a NATO Defence Ministers meeting
at the Alliance's headquarters in Brussels, June 9, 2005. (Reuters
photo) |
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| NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop
Scheffer, left front, gestures while speaking with Italian Defense
Minister Antonio Martino, right center, during a group photo at NATO
headquarters in Brussels, Thursday June 9, 2005. (Reuters
photo) | BRUSSELS,
June 9 (Xinhuanet) -- NATO defense ministers, who met here for a two-day
meeting, gave on Thursday the green light to an operation to airlift extra
African troops to Sudan's troubled Darfur region.
The action, to kick off on July 1, is the alliance's
first mission on the African continent.
"The situation in that region is appalling, and we
must do all that is in our power, in coordination with other organizations
starting with the EU, to assist the African Union," said NATO Secretary-General
Jaap de Hoop Scheffer at a press conference during the meeting.
The North Atlantic Council, the decision-making body
of NATO, decided on May 22 to offer logistic assistance to the mission of the
African Union (AU) in Darfur.
However, the Sudanese government rejected any NATO
troops on its soil, and the AU would play a leading role in the mission.
NATO would also have to cooperate with the European
Union in the assistance.
"We cooperate, we coordinate, while the African Union
is definitely the leader," De Hoop Scheffer said. Enditem |