http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/library/news/2006/10/mil-061003-irin0
3.htm
 

SUDAN: Uneasy calm after 11 killed in Darfur clashes

KHARTOUM, 3 Oct 2006 (IRIN) - Clashes between fighters loyal to the Sudan
Liberation Movement/Army (SLM/A) and Justice and Equality Movement (JEM)
have left at least 11 civilians dead in Gereida town, South Darfur State in
western Sudan, sources said on Tuesday.

"The AU [African Union] military group in Gereida reported that SLM
combatants had driven most of the men out," Noureddine Mezni, an AU
spokesman, said in Khartoum. "The combatants were busy looting the
properties of the men and raping the wives."

Fighting began late last week, when rebels from the JEM attacked the SLM
members, prompting some agencies to withdraw staff from the town. 

An uneasy calm returned to Gereida over the weekend. "Information from the
area is scanty, but the fighting took place in town," an aid worker in
Darfur told IRIN on Tuesday. "It has definitely calmed down in the last two
days, but the situation remains extremely tense." 

Gereida Camp is home to 130,000 internally displaced Darfuri civilians. "The
situation is very, very tense and we are very concerned about this
situation," Mezni said.

Animosity between rebel groups has run high since one faction of the SLM,
led by Minni Minnawi, signed an AU-brokered peace agreement with the
Sudanese government in May. Other groups, including the JEM, refused the
deal, saying it did not meet their basic demands. 

According to the United Nations Mission in Sudan, the security situation has
particularly worsened in Gereida. 

Despite international pressure to allow a UN mission to replace the
cash-strapped AU, Sudan has rejected the proposal, with President Omar
al-Bashir calling it an attempt to recolonise his country.

On Tuesday, the Sudanese government said it may not extend the mandate of
the AU mission in Darfur beyond December. The statement was a response to
the UN envoy to Sudan, Jan Pronk, who suggested last week that the AU should
remain in the country into 2007.

"Sudan has no problem with the AU forces, but what is available now is an
extension until December," Fadlalla Ibrahim, the acting spokesman for the
Foreign Ministry, said on Tuesday. 

At least two million people have been driven from their homes in three years
of fighting in Darfur between the Sudanese government, allied militias and
rebel forces. The conflict began when rebels in Darfur attacked government
positions, saying the remote region remained undeveloped due to Khartoum's
neglect. 

Sudan is charged with arming militias known as Janjawid to crush the
rebellion using a campaign of rape and murder. Sudan denies these charges. 


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