KHARTOUM, June 3 (Xinhua) -- Most camps of refugees
and internal displaced persons (IDPs) in Sudan's western region of Darfur are in
a state of disarray because of continuous demonstrations against the African
Union (AU)-sponsored peace deal between the government and Darfur rebel
movements.
Most of the demonstrators are from the Fur tribe, the
biggest non-Arab tribe in Darfur, and supporters of Abudu al-Wahid Mohammed
al-Nour, also a Furian, who is leading a main faction in the rebel Sudan
Liberation Movement (SLM) and has refused to sign the AU-sponsored peace
agreement, said an official administrating one of the biggest refugee camps in
Darfur.
The disarray in the refugee camp coincides with an
escalation of security tensions in the region following the signing of the peace
agreement in the Nigerian capital Abuja on May 5 between the government and the
biggest SLM faction led by Minna Arkou Minawi, who is from the Zaghawa tribe.
The AU had asked al-Nour and Khalil Ibrahim, the
leader of the rebel Justice and Equality Movement (JEM), to sign the peace
agreement before May 31, but the deadline was missed.
Al-Nour said the agreement did not grant Darfurians a fair share of the
political power and wealth in the region, insisting that a Darfurian should be
appointed as the vice president of the country, which have been refused by the
government.
"Since May 5, demonstrations have been taken place every day in the Abu Shuk
camp," the biggest camp in the North Darfur state which is located about four km
north of al-Fashir and houses some 50,000 refugees, Mohammed Salih Mustafa,
director of the camp, told Xinhua in a telephone contact.
The demonstrators believed that the peace agreement
failed to meet their basic demands and did not guarantee a safe return of the
refugees to their villages, from where they had escaped because of the armed
conflict which erupted in Feb. 2003.
In the coming days, the 15-member AU Peace and Security Council is to hold a
meeting in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa to consider the next steps,
probably including sanctions against the Darfur rebel leaders boycotting the
peace agreement.
Mustafa stressed that the security situation, however, in the camp was not
worrisome and had not reach the degree of disaster. "The security and political
authorities know exactly how the situation is in the camp," said the official,
adding that "the Sudanese police and the civilian police forces sent by the AU
are working well to maintain the security for the refugees in the camp."
Repatriating some one million refugees and IDPs to
their homelands is one of the main items in the Darfur peace agreement, and the
local governments in Darfur's three states have also adopted a program of
repatriation.
But the work is facing a big challenge because of the
positions refusing the peace agreement and the escalation of the tension in the
region.
On Wednesday, Jan Egeland, emergency relief
coordinator of the United Nations, warned that the world body should withdraw
its aid workers from Darfur unless their security is to be ensured.
Chairperson of the AU Commission Alpha Oumar Konare also said on Thursday
that a progressive deterioration of the security situation had been witnessed in
Darfur in the past few weeks, warning that future violations of the ceasefire
agreement would not be tolerated.
The AU Mission in Sudan (AMIS) should act proactively
to fulfill all aspects of its mandate, including the right of self-defense and
the protection of civilian population in danger, said Konare.
The AU official urged all the parties involved in the
Darfur conflict to immediately stop any activity threatening the peace and give
a chance for an implementation of the peace agreement. Enditem