Increase of UN troops in Abyei is part of a previous agreement, Sudan says

May 18, 2013 (KHARTOUM) - Sudan’s foreign ministry has stated that the
call of the UN secretary General for adding (1126) troops to the UN
Interim Force for Abyei (UNISFA) came in the context of an earlier
agreement between Sudan and South Sudan and the UN.
Soldiers of the United Nations’ Interim Force for Abyei (UN)
Ban Ki-moon in his report to the UN Security Council on Thursday 17
May warned that "the presence of armed groups inside the Demilitarised
Border Zone remains a considerable security concern for the Joint
Border Verification and Monitoring Mechanism".

The UN chief asked the Security Council to increase the UNISFA bt 1126
personnel saying it will strength the effectiveness and efficiency of
UN Peacekeeping.

The mission which is initially had to monitor the security situation
in Abyei is now also tasked with the security situation in the five
disputed area forming the buffer zone on the border between the Sudan
and South Sudan.

The foreign ministry’s spokesperson, Abu-Bakr Al-Siddiq, on Saturday
said however that they haven’t officially received the request of the
Secretary-General to increase the number of troops.

He further added they consider the move as part of the previous
security agreement which stipulates that protection of the
demilitarized zone including Abyei area is part of UNISFA’s mandate.

The UN Secretary General has pointed out that Abyei area is
experiencing increasing tension between the Dinka Ngok and Misseriya,
saying these groups are still armed, and exchanging hostility and
suspicions.

The existing UNISFA is comprised of 3973 troops; most of them are
Ethiopians, while its troop strength authorized by the UNSC is 4,200
soldiers.

The report said that "the remaining 227 troops will be deployed within
the air aviation unit, as military observers, staff officers and as
part of the Joint Border Verification and Monitoring Mechanism".

The killing of the Ngok Dinka Paramount Chief and UNISFA peacekeeper
on 4 May increased the tension in the disputed area.

The two sides at the level of Abyei Joint Oversight Committee recently
decided to make Abyei a "weapons-free area" as per the 20 June 2011
Agreement and that all perpetrators of criminal acts be brought to
justice, by traditional or by formal means.

Moon further said that the delay of the referendum undermines efforts
to maintain security and ensure stability of the humanitarian
situation, stressing that it is the duty of Khartoum and Juba prevent
unauthorized armed individuals from entering Abyei.

An Abyei referendum initially scheduled for January 2011 was due to
decide the fate of the area but disagreements between the ruling
parties of Sudan and South Sudan over who was eligible to participate
has led to a stalemate.

The African Union tried to break the deadlock last year, proposing
that the plebiscite go ahead in October 2013, but only for those
permanently residing in the area - effectively excluding the Misseriya
nomads, leaving the Southern-aligned Dinka Ngok free to vote in favour
of joining South Sudan.

Khartoum has rejected the plan, but AU mediators stress the exclusion
of the Misseriya nomads is consistent with the decision of the
International Court of Arbitration in July 2009, which defined Abyei’s
territory as the nine Ngok Dinka chiefdoms.

(ST)

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