KHARTOUM, June 25 (Xinhua) -- A UN spokeswoman denied
here on Sunday that the world body had been officially informed of the Sudanese
government's decision to suspend UN activities in the country's troubled western
region of Darfur.
"We have not received any formal or official
notification on the decision from the Sudanese government," Radhia Achouri,
spokeswoman of the UN Mission in Sudan (UNMIS), told Xinhua.
"We cannot make comments on what we have seen in the
press media," the spokeswoman added.
Meanwhile, a Sudanese official source, who spoke on
condition of anonymity, told Xinhua that the decision to suspend UN activities
in Darfur was made because an UN helicopter had transported Suleiman Adam
Jamous, a senior member of a Darfur rebel group who rejected a peace agreement,
without consultations with the Sudanese government.
He also said that since Special Representative of the
UN Secretary General in Sudan Jan Pronk was currently in the Dutch capital
Amsterdam, the Sudanese Foreign Ministry was to summon another UNMIS official
instead to clarify the incident.
On Saturday night, the Sudanese government ordered
Darfur local authorities to suspend UN activities in the region except
humanitarian work of the World Food Program (WFP) and other international aid
agencies.
Meanwhile, the Sudanese Foreign Ministry announced in
a statement that the government had to take this decision because the UNMIS
overstepped its mandate by airlifting the leader of the Darfur rebel movement
al-Fashir to Masbad and then to Kadugli. All of the three towns were located in
Darfur.
"The suspension will be lifted when the Special
Representative of the UN Secretary General in Sudan (Pronk) clarifies the UNMIS'
position," the statement added.
The Sudanese government signed the Darfur Peace
Agreement (DPA) with a main faction in the rebel Sudan Liberation Movement (SLA)
led by Minna Arkou Minawi in the Nigerian Capital Abuja on May 5.
The rival SLA faction led by al-Wahid Mohammed
al-Nour and the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) led by Khalil Ibrahim have
so far refused to ink the DPA, insisting on modifications of the deal.
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