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Khartoum, rebels trade blame for peacekeepers’ ambush

Published: 15 Jul 2013 - 03:03 am | Last Updated: 31 Jan 2022 - 01:39 pm

KHARTOUM: Rebels in Sudan’s Darfur region accused government-linked militiamen yesterday of staging an ambush which killed seven peacekeepers, but Khartoum blamed the insurgents.

About 50 UNAMID members have now died in hostile action since the mission began five years ago, but UN sources say they are unaware of anyone having been held accountable.

Abdel Wahid Mohammed al-Nur, who commands a faction of the Sudan Liberation Army (SLA), said government “intelligence and militia” carried out Saturday’s attack which also wounded 17 other military and police personnel from the African Union-United Nations Mission in Darfur (UNAMID).

“They are doing this in order to frighten UNAMID and to shake the international community in order to withdraw this force,” he said. Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, head of the African Union Commission, said “UNAMID will not be deterred” in its mission.

Sudan’s foreign ministry condemned the incident, expressed condolences to the victims’ families, and blamed “the so-called Sudan Liberation Army Minnawi faction... for this aggression”.

Abdullah Moursal, spokesman for the SLA group led by Minni Minnawi, earlier Sunday said: “We don’t have any doubt that the act was done by government militia, because militia are deployed in Khor Abeche area. This area is completely under government control.”

Khartoum “must take full responsibility for this incident,” said Gibril Adam Bilal, of the Justice and Equality Movement rebels. He claimed government-equipped militia carried out the attack.

UNAMID said the ambush by “a large unidentified group” struck about 25 kilometres (16 miles) west of a UNAMID base at Khor Abeche, north of the South Darfur state capital Nyala.

All of the dead were from Tanzania. It was the worst attack in UNAMID’s five-year history.

Rebels have been fighting the government for a decade in Darfur, but UNAMID says clashes between rival tribal and ethnic groups have been responsible for most of the worsening unrest there this year. 

UN experts, human rights activists and tribal leaders have accused government security forces of involvement in this year’s tribal fighting.

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon expressed outrage at Saturday’s “heinous attack” and called on Khartoum to take swift action to bring the perpetrators to justice.

The UN has made repeated similar calls after attacks on its peacekeepers in Sudan but Herve Ladsous, the UN’s Undersecretary General for Peacekeeping, said in Sudan this month that “we have had little by way of information after past investigations” by Sudanese authorities into the attacks. Khartoum on Sunday pledged support for UNAMID and said it was committed to an “urgent investigation” to bring the culprits to justice. 

An estimated 300,000 people have been displaced by violence in Darfur this year — more than in the past two years combined.

There were already 1.4 million people in camps for people displaced by Darfur’s conflict.

Nur, of the SLA, said authorities want UNAMID out of Darfur so they can empty the camps. He said UNAMID needs a stronger mandate to make it a “peacemaker”.

In April, a Nigerian peacekeeper was killed and two were wounded in an assault on their base east of Nyala.

The authorities denied suggestions by local sources that the attack appeared to have been planned and carried out by government-linked forces.

A UN panel of experts earlier this year reported that former pro-government militiamen had sometimes expressed their discontent with the current government through “direct attacks on UNAMID staff and premises”.

AFP