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By Rodrique Ngowi
03/11/2005
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the entire article.
NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) - A tiny African peacekeeping force is creating
pockets of security in Sudan's western Darfur region -- successfully
heading off attacks on civilians, negotiating the release of hostages
and providing safety for some villagers to return to their homes,
officials said Friday.
The limited success of the 2,200-strong
force shows that a bigger force with more support from the
international community could stabilize the region, said Kenneth Bacon, a former Pentagon spokesman who now heads
the advocacy group.
In
January, another AU commander foiled an attack on Labado, a town of
27,000 people, by deploying 100 peacekeepers to the area and a nearby
town. He was acting on information that pro-government forces planned
to raid the town that was leveled in late December in a bid to drive
out rebels.
The
African Union Mission in Sudan, or AMIS, "is doing a
spectacular job in the areas in which it has deployed. The best example
is Labado, where it has stationed about 100 troops since January. More
than 10,000 people have returned to the area because AMIS forces are
providing a sense of security," Bacon said.
Pockets
of security in Darfur are expected to
expand as members of AU's 815-strong civil police force continue to
arrive and begin to patrol in and around the camps that are housing
people who fled their homes, Bacon said.
"Patrols
on the perimeter of the camps should cut the number of rapes and other
attacks against women leaving the camps to collect firewood and grass,"
Bacon said.
The AU force, however, needs to expand to
at least 10,000 troops to fully stabilize Darfur, Bacon said.
The U.N.
Department of Peacekeeping Operations is currently assessing the AU
mission to determine its current and future needs. The assessment,
which should be finished before the end of the month, will help the AU,
donor nations and the UN determine what should be done next to
stabilize and secure Darfur, Bacon said.
"As long
as our hands and legs are tied by a lack of resources to finance
peacekeeping operations, Africa cannot move forward to solve the crisis
in Darfur," said AU spokesman Desmond
Orjiako. "We have received help, but what we are now saying is they
(donors) should move faster."
Sudan: A Climate of Impunity in Darfur
Sudan: Internally Displaced Remain Terrorized and Afraid to Go Home
Sudan: African Union Peace Monitors Creating Pockets of Security in Darfur
Sudan: Violence Against Civilians Continues in Darfur
Sudan 2005: RI Mission to Focus on Security Issues
Improving Peacekeeping Capacity
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