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Wednesday, February 06, 2008

Update: Fighting in Chad Slows, Problems Still Persist

Simon Warren

On the ground—Fighting between rebels and government forces has stopped in Chad’s capital, Ndjamena, the New York Times reports. Rebel forces had made their way to the capital, but over the past two days, the government had claimed to put down the fighting in the city. Problems still face the region, as Chad’s government accuses its neighbor Sudan of supporting the rebels, and Sudan accuses Chad of supporting Darfuri rebels. Both countries have long histories of intervening in each other’s affairs, as initial janjaweed militia men were from Chad, and Chad has allowed a European peacekeeping force to enter , against the wishes of Sudan. Conditions still are quite bad in Chad after the fighting has been stablized, with injured people only receiving treatment now, and with food shortages in the country.

In diplomacy-- Ethiopia and Bangladesh have promised helicopters to the beleagured UNAMID force. Ethiopia told UN ambassadors that they would give 3 transport helicopters and 2 attack helicopters. Bangladesh’s contribution promise is more vague. The force has had a great need for helicopters to patrol the Darfur area, and has issued a plan for 18 attack and 6 transport helicopters. The force is still undermanned, at 9,000 soldiers from 26,000 planned. Thai and Nepalese soldiers are scheduled to arrive soon, but Sudan is still demanding that as much of the force be African as possible.

The Dutch say that they are willing to host peace talks between Sudanese officials and rebel groups. The statement comes after Dutch Development Minister Bert Koenders met with a representative of the Sudan Liberation Movement/ Army (SLM/A) rebel group, SLM/A commander Ahmed Abdel Shafi has been quoted as saying: “The Netherlands would be a good option for peace talks.” and “Last October we gave a letter to the Dutch ambassador in Khartoum, with a request for peace talks in the Netherlands.” Talks in Libya in October stalled as SLM/A and other major rebel groups boycotted the talks.

UN Secretary General Ban-Ki Moon says that many of the problems in the beleagured region are caused by water shortages. In an address to the General Assembly, Ban stated “Water shortages are at the core of many of the UN Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), one of which is to reduce by half the number of people without safe access to water by 2015. When you consider the health and development challenges facing the poorest of the world’s population - diseases like malaria or TB [tuberculosis], rising food prices, environmental degradation - the common denominator often seems to be water.”

In the activist movement-- Activist and actor Mia Farrow has criticized director Stephen Spielberg of complicity in supporting a Darfur-China connection. The director, while being donating money to many anti-genocidal organizations and activities, has continued to be an artistic advisor for the opening and closing ceremonies in the 2008 Beijing Olympics. China has over $2 billion invested in Sudanese oil interests, and the Olympic games are targeted as a key issue in both China’s emergence in international affluence and as a key demonstration of the country’s involvement in the genocide in Darfur.

Posted by Simon Warren on 02/06 at 09:16 PM
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