UN Reauthorizes Darfur Peacekeeping
Security Council Approves Another Year Of Peacekeeping; U.S. Abstains
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Play CBS Video Video Searching For Jacob Jacob fled his village in Darfur to escape mass murder, leaving his family and schoolbooks behind. Scott Pelley puts a face on the horrible genocide in Sudan when he tracks down Jacob to return his books.
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Video Stories From Darfur An aid worker in Darfur is trying to draw the world's attention to the conflict in Sudan with a petition. Hundreds of thousands of displaced people are telling their stories. Mark Phillips reports.
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Video In Rwanda Bush Sees Darfur President Bush visited Rwanda where he paid tribute to victims of the genocide there and pledged monetary aid to fight the genocide in Darfur. Bill Plante reports.
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Women in the Um Shalaya refugee camp south of the Darfur town of Al-Geneina, April 25, 2007. (AP)
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Interactive Struggle In Sudan Five-year conflict in Darfur region has left hundreds of thousands dead and displaced millions.
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Photo Essay Darfur Protests Thousands of people join celebrities and lawmakers in urging a greater U.S. role in effort to end genocide in the troubled region.
The United States, despite support for the struggling peacekeeping mission, did not vote because of its opposition to any delay in efforts to prosecute Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir.
The resolution that was approved 14-0 carried language that noted an African Union request to freeze the International Criminal Court's prosecution of al-Bashir.
Though the measure does not stop the prosecution, U.S. Deputy Ambassador Alejandro Wolff said that the language "would send the wrong signal" to al-Bashir and "undermine efforts to bring him and others to justice."
Luis Moreno-Ocampo, chief prosecutor of the international court, filed 10 charges against al-Bashir on July 14 related to violence in Darfur that the U.N. says has claimed 300,000 lives and driven 2.5 million people from their homes.
Those who survive are preyed upon by the government-backed janjaweed Arab militia and regular troops, Moreno-Ocampo said. The court could takes months to decide on his request for an arrest warrant.
The resolution - drafted by Britain - also emphasizes "the need to bring to justice the perpetrators of such crimes and urging the government of Sudan to comply with its obligations in this respect, and reiterating its condemnation of all violations of human rights and international humanitarian law in Darfur."
In an effort to stem the violence, a joint U.N.-African Union peacekeeping force took over duties in Darfur in January from a beleaguered AU force. The joint force has about 7,500 troops and less than 2,000 police, out of a total of 26,000 that have been authorized. The U.N. is seeking to boost the force to nearly 21,000 by year end.
Libya and South Africa, backed by Russia and China, which both have council veto power, took the AU's side in pushing for the council to put on hold for a year efforts to prosecute al-Bashir.
Chinese Ambassador Wang Guangya said the prosecutor's moves "will seriously undermine" chances for peace in the region and the uncertainty over how the Sudanese government and other forces might react "will have serious implications for stability in that region, but also ... for the U.N. soldiers on the ground."
The U.S., Britain and France - the other three veto-wielding council members - opposed delaying the prosecutor's work.
Unlike the U.S., however, Britain and France were willing to include in the resolution a paragraph "taking note" of the desire by the AU and some council members to have the council freeze the prosecution, and of their intention to revisit the topic later.
"It's very likely ... that we will discuss this again over the coming months," British Ambassador John Sawers said.
The vote on the Darfur mission was preceded by intensive negotiations over the past several weeks. At one point Thursday, council members huddled in an unusual, big circle around Wolff and Russian Ambassador Vitaly Churkin as they argued.
The final vote came little more than two hours before the mission's mandate was set to expire at midnight.
The last-ditch American effort to remove the language "took everybody by surprise because the African Union is a partner in the Darfur issue," said Sudanese Ambassador Abdalmahmood Abdalhaleem Mohamad.
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- Darfur is about OIL nothing more, nothing less.
The Saudi''s have invested heavily in Sudan. The people of Darfur will never see any benefit from their countries wealth. US strategy is to let them all die for Big Oil & Saudi investors.
Sudan is one of seven countries on the administrations HIT LIST........
Amy Goodman''s interview with General Wesley Clark. Clark stated he viewed a defense department memo that described how the U.S. was going to take out seven countries in five years....
"starting with Iraq,then Syria and Lebanon, then Libya,then Somalia and Sudan, and back to Iran."
And the extermination continues............ - Reply to this comment
- A really good birth-control campaign might go a long way in helping severely impoverished nations.
Why people continue to have children they know they cannot feed is beyond me.
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Posted by OneWorldUSA at 01:24 AM : Aug 01, 2008
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BECAUSE IF THAT EVER HAPPENS....the UN, Bono and Geldof would be out of a very lucrative job.. - Reply to this comment
- A really good birth-control campaign might go a long way in helping severely impoverished nations.
Why people continue to have children they know they cannot feed is beyond me. - Reply to this comment
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