KHARTOUM, April 30 (Xinhua) -- Through a multipartite
ministerial meeting held in the Libyan capital Tripoli at the weekend, the Arab
countries stepped up to the front stage regarding the Darfur issue in the
western Sudanese region, local analysts said on Monday.
The meeting called by Libya, was attended by
officials from Sudan, Chad, Egypt, Eritrea, Libya, the five permanent members of
the UN Security Council as well as the African Union, the European Union, the
League of Arab States, and the United Nations.
The meeting was held at a time when Darfur rebel
movements were continuously boycotting a resumption of peace talks and Khartoum
was under mounting pressures to approve the deployment of UN peacekeepers in
Darfur.
Before the Tripoli meeting, all the regional and
international meetings regarding the Darfur issue as well as contacts and
negotiations between the Sudanese government and Darfur rebel groups had been
held in non-Arab countries of the African continent.
Of the two milestones in the Darfur peace process,
one ceasefire accord was reached in the Chadian capital N'Djamena on April 8,
2004, and the more significant Darfur Peace Agreement (DPA) was signed by the
Sudanese government and a main Darfur rebel faction in the Nigerian capital
Abuja on May 5, 2006.
Arab countries have played no apparent mediation role
in either the crystallization of the N'Djamena ceasefire accord or the Abuja
agreement, leaving the non-Arab African countries to perform the sponsorship of
the Darfur peace process.
However, the Tripoli meeting signalled a change of
the Arab countries from a low profile policy, which they had pursued to avoid a
complication of the Darfur situation, to a public intervention due to their
cautiousness of what they think the real intentions of the Western countries in
Darfur, according to local analysts.
Addressing the opening session on Saturday, Libyan
leader Muammar Gaddafi accused Darfur rebels of seeking to internationalize the
conflict. Also he cautioned the international community against too much
intervention in the Darfur issue.
Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Abul Gheit and
intelligence chief Omar Suleiman paid a surprise visit on April 23 in Khartoum,
where they held talks with Sudanese officials and conveyed a message to Sudanese
President Omer al-Bashir from his Egyptian counterpart Hosni Mubarak.
Shortly after the visit, Cairo announced that it
would send more than 500 soldiers to participate in the AU peacekeeping forces
in Darfur.
The Egyptian soldiers will be the first fighting
troops deployed by an Arab country in Darfur, where a number of medical teams
and engineering units from the Arab states are working in the 7800-strong AU
force.
After the two day conference, diplomats issued a
communique, the Tripoli Consensus on Darfur Political Process, and announced
their support for the agreement reached by the Sudanese government, the UN and
the AU in Addis Ababa on Nov. 16, 2006, on the deployment of an AU-UN hybrid
peacekeeping force in Darfur.
It underlined "the urgency of finding a comprehensive
and sustainable solution to the Darfur crisis", warning all parties "that those
who obstruct the peace process in Darfur will have to bear the consequences."
Libyan Foreign Minister Ali Triki told reporters on
Sunday that the meeting had sent "a strong message on the issue of keeping peace
and security in Darfur", which should be to carefully read and understood by the
Sudanese parties, local media reported.
Related:
China calls for pushing
forward political process in resolving Darfur issue
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Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs
envoy Song Aiguo attends an international conference on the situation in
Darfur in the town of Tripoli, 29 April 2007. (Xinhua/AFP
Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
CAIRO,
April 29 (Xinhua) -- China on Sunday called for pushing forward the ongoing
political process in resolving the Darfur issue in the Sudanese western region.
Chinese Foreign Ministry official Song Aiguo made the
call in a two-day multipartite meeting on Darfur which ended earlier on Sunday
in Tripoli, according to news reports reaching here from the Libyan capital. Full story
Arab League blast U.S.
resolution on Sudan's Darfur
CAIRO, April 29 (Xinhua) -- The Arab League (AL) on Sunday
criticized the U.S. House of Representatives for its resolution which asked the
AL to declare a genocide in western Sudanese region of Darfur.
"What is weird is that no international or regional
institution has referred to human rights violations in Darfur as a genocide,"
the AL said in a statement carried by Egypt's official MENA news agency. Full story