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Related: Bush offers emergency food aid to
Sudan UN humanitarian chief visits
Darfur
RABAT, May 9 (Xinhua) -- The United Nations and
Washington have no ground to intervene in the Darfur crisis following the
signing of a peace agreement, a senior official from the conflict-torn region
said Monday.
The UN and the United States have no political or
legal basis to step in, Salah Eddine Ghazi, deputy governor of Darfur and an
adviser to Sudan's President Omar al-Bashir, told reporters here.
Salah has attended a pan-Arab conference in
Casablanca.
On Friday, the Sudanese government and the Sudan
Liberation Movement faction led by Minni Arkou Minawi signed a peace agreement
in the Nigerian capital Abuja to end a three-year-old armed conflict.
The United States is proposing that a UN peacekeeping
force be moved into the region from southern Sudan to reinforce a 7,000-strong
African Union force.
The Sudanese government has refused to deploy UN
peacekeeping personnel.
Ghazi also called on rebel factions staying out of
the peace treaty to join.
Friday's peace agreement was rejected by two armed
groups, which maintained that security and compensation for war victims have not
been guaranteed. Enditem |