ACT
International calls for continued commitment to humanitarian response
and peace efforts in Darfur
GENEVA, August 3, 2007—The global alliance ACT International urges the international
community to increase its response to the grave humanitarian crisis
in Darfur, Sudan, and step up efforts for creating a lasting peace
in the wider region.
This
follows the long-awaited breakthrough resolution by the United Nations
(UN) Security Council to send 26,000 peacekeepers to the conflict-stricken
region. The purpose of the peacekeepers is to provide vital security
to civilians and aid workers in Darfur.
“Although
we recognise that this force is not an end-all solution to the conflict,
we do hope it brings greater stability and access to some four million
people in desperate need of humanitarian assistance,” says Sushant
Agrawal, moderator of ACT International’s executive committee.
The
peacekeepers could take into 2008 to be in place, which means that
the African Union presence of only 7,000 troops will continue to
be the main peacekeeping force in Darfur
for the coming months. The new peacekeeping force is to combine
with the African (Union) Mission
in Sudan (AMIS) by the end of the year, and will have increased
authority to use force to protect civilians and assist the delivery
of relief supplies.
The
conflict in Darfur has cost some 200,000 people their lives, displaced
over two and a half million, and affected an estimated four million
people since the outbreak of fighting in 2003.
Hopes
that the Darfur Peace Agreement (DPA) signed in Abuja,
Nigeria
in May 2006, would bring some peace to the region and permit the
process of rehabilitation and recovery to start have not materialised.
Humanitarian conditions and security have deteriorated steadily
since then.
“The
only lasting solution is a negotiated peace agreement, which now
needs concerted international focus,” says Agrawal.
The
global alliance Action by Churches Together (ACT) International
and Caritas Internationalis have been responding jointly in Darfur
from the outset of this crisis, working through a network of faith-based
and Sudanese aid agencies. It has been providing shelter, clean
water and sanitation, as well as building health clinics and schools
for people living in camps for the displaced. Insecurity has hampered
relief efforts and in June, an ACT-Caritas staff member was killed.
It
is hoped that a meeting originally planned for this week in Arusha,
Tanzania to push for unity among different factions
involved in the conflict in Darfur,
will lay the framework for a new round of peace negotiations.
ACT
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