 |
|
Powel
is reportedly leaning towards deeming violence in
Darfur
genocide
|
WASHINGTON,
September 9 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – The United
States has presented a draft UN resolution calling for sanctions
mainly against Sudan’s oil sector – dominated by Chinese companies
– allegedly for lack of progress by the Khartoum government to end
the crisis in Darfur.
The
resolution, to be discussed by the UN Security Council Thursday,
September 9, declares that
Sudan
has failed to comply with a previous resolution in July to rein in the
pro-government Arab militias behind the
Darfur
crisis.
The
council passed a resolution on July 30 that gave the Sudanese
government 30 days to disarm the Janjaweed and held out the
possibility of sanctions.
But
UN special representative to Sudan Jan Pronk admitted there is
progress on the ground, as a number of member states, including
veto-wielding
Russia
and
China
, opposed the option of sanctions.
The
new American draft sets out another 30-day period for
Sudan
to comply with the previous resolution and cooperate with African
Union monitors watching for violations of the April ceasefire between
the government and the rebels.
UN
Secretary General Kofi Annan would report back to the council at the
end of the period and if
Sudan
has not complied, the council "will take further actions" on
sanctions, according to the draft, carried by Agence France-Presse
(AFP).
Oil
Reserves
If
Khartoum
has still not complied by the deadline, sanctions may be introduced
"including with regard to the petroleum sector".
Sudan
currently produces about 320,000 barrels of oil per day.
The
oil concession in southern
Darfur
is currently in the hands of the China National Petroleum Company.
As
oil pipelines continue to be blown up in
Iraq
, the west "not only has a clear motive for establishing control
over alternative sources of energy, it has also officially adopted the
policy that our armies should be used to do precisely this," the
Guardian reported
Monday, August 2.
International
Over-flights
The
new draft calls for international overflights to monitor the
situation, as was the case in northern
Iraq
during more than 13 years of sanctions on the Arab country – which
has the world’s second largest oil reserves.
It
calls for Annan to set up an international enquiry commission to look
into rights violations in Darfur, something that
US
envoy Stuart Holliday called important in "holding people
accountable for the actions of the past."
Although
the draft acknowledges "some limited improvement" in
increasing access in Darfur for aid workers, it says
Sudan
"has failed fully to comply" with the July resolution and a
separate agreement with Annan to calm the situation.
The
draft has drawn an initial reservation among member states of the
council.
"We
never thought that after 30 days, everything should have changed in a
dramatic way -- that the militias would have been disarmed, and that
security would have been fully restored," said
Algeria
's UN ambassador Abdallah Baali.
"We
have seen some important progress made and so our view is to work
closely with the government of
Sudan
," said Baali, whose nation is the only Arab member of the
council.
The
Sudanese government is accused of arming the militias, which are
blamed for a brutal campaign in Darfur, a vast area the size of
France
in the west of
Sudan
,
Africa
's largest nation. The government denies the accusations.
Genocide
Washington
will also press for an approval of its Security Council draft, with
Powell reportedly leaning toward a determination that the violence in
Darfur
constitutes genocide, in his testimony before the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee Thursday.
Powell
will reveal whether the
United States
now concludes the violence there as genocide, which would carry a
legal obligation for the government to act, the BBC News Online said.
The
US House of Representatives has already declared the violence genocide,
but the state department has until now argued that the word is a legal
definition and that the data was not available, it added.
The
European Union said in August no evidence was found on genocide taking
place in
Darfur
"We
are not in the situation of genocide there, " Pieter Feith, who
visited
Sudan
on behalf of the EU foreign affairs chief Javier Solana, leading an EU
fact-finding mission in the region.
"Reports
submitted by the WHO employees have not mentioned any acts of ethnic
cleansing, genocide or mass rapes as claimed by western human rights
organizations," Dr Hussein Gezairy, Regional Director of WHO's
Eastern Mediterranean Region, has also agreed.