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Sudan refuses to allow troops from Canada into Darfur
By JEFF SALLOT
Saturday, May 14, 2005 Page A5
OTTAWA -- The Sudanese ambassador says her country will not allow Canadian troops into Darfur despite an assistance package from the minority Liberal government that includes up to 100 military advisers to help the African Union maintain peace in that war-ravaged region of western Sudan.
Ambassador Faiza Hassan Taha said Prime Minister Paul Martin rushed to make the announcement Thursday before anyone from the Canadian government asked the Sudanese whether they agreed.
Rather than meaningful consultation, she said in an interview, Canada presented Sudan with a fait accompli.
Mr. Martin telephoned Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir about 24 hours in advance to "advise" him of the announcement, PMO spokeswoman Melanie Gruer said.
When asked whether this was a "consultation," Ms. Gruer declined to use that word to characterize the conversation, repeating instead that "the Sudanese were advised." She said she did not know where precisely the troops would be deployed.
Human-rights groups say the Khartoum regime, a military dictatorship, has been inattentive to the rapes and murders of thousands of Darfur farmers by marauding militias known as janjaweed.
Ms. Taha said Sudan welcomes Canadian concern about the Darfur conflict, and is always open to consultations on foreign humanitarian and technical assistance programs.
But Khartoum, she said, will not allow foreign peacekeeping troops into Darfur from anywhere except other African countries.
Sudan is very concerned about the political atmosphere on Parliament Hill, with independent MP David Kilgour demanding that Mr. Martin send 500 Canadian combat troops to Darfur in exchange for his support on a confidence vote next week, Ms. Taha said.
Mr. Martin said Thursday that Canada is providing a $170-million assistance package for Darfur that includes an "initial" deployment of up to 100 Canadian military intelligence officers, strategic planners and logistics experts to assist the African Union peacekeeping operation in the region with military planning, intelligence and transport.
The Prime Minister did not specify whether these soldiers would go into the three states that comprise the Darfur region -- a vast area where 300,000 have died in the past two years -- or whether they will be confined to an African Union headquarters outside the region.
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