البى بى سى:تقريرا لمجموعة الازمات الدوليه يدعو لتطبيق عقوبات صارمه على السودان تطال البترول!!!

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10-12-2006, 01:15 AM

السنجك
<aالسنجك
تاريخ التسجيل: 05-27-2002
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البى بى سى:تقريرا لمجموعة الازمات الدوليه يدعو لتطبيق عقوبات صارمه على السودان تطال البترول!!!

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    Tough sanctions urged over Darfur

    More than two million people have been displaced during the conflict
    A "weak and divided" international response on sending UN peacekeepers to Darfur is playing into the hands of the Sudanese government, a report says.
    The International Crisis Group says diplomacy has "failed" and targeted sanctions are now needed to prevent the humanitarian situation from worsening.

    It calls for economic measures to be applied to key business interests, in particular Sudan's petroleum sector.

    An estimated 200,000 people have been killed during three years of fighting.

    'Cracks appearing'

    The ICG report says unless the world presents a unified front on the issue of Darfur, Khartoum will continue to exploit divisions, believing it can "act with virtual impunity".

    The BBC's Karen Allen says cracks have appeared in the international community's position.

    AU FORCE
    7,200 troops
    Mandate renewed until 31 December
    Mainly Rwandan and Nigerian troops
    Main role to monitor and verify peace agreement
    Low in morale, poorly equipped and vulnerable to attack
    Darfur report (207K)
    Most computers will open PDF documents automatically, but you may need to download Adobe Acrobat Reader
    Download the reader here

    Countries like Britain and the US argue that sending UN peacekeepers to Darfur is the only acceptable option, whilst other key players such as the UN special representative to Sudan, Jan Pronk, has suggested shifting the focus to bolstering the overstretched African Union (AU) force.

    The 7,000-strong AU peacekeeping force was recently granted an extension of its mandate until the end of the year, with numbers on the ground expected to grow to 11,000.

    However, the Sudanese government has repeatedly rejected plans to transform the African force into the 20,600-strong UN mission agreed to by the Security Council in August, claiming their presence would constitute a breach of sovereignty.

    The report says targeted sanctions should be applied to Sudan's key business interests, in particular its petroleum sector.

    This should be done in combination with limited military action, including the establishment of a no-fly-zone over Darfur, as well as steps to make the International Criminal Court investigation into war crimes more effective, the report says.

    It argues that in past disputes - for example over the issue of international terror suspects - Khartoum has responded positively to economic pressure.

    The ICG says it is concerned that any alternative action would be "too little too late" as the security and humanitarian situation
                  

10-12-2006, 06:50 AM

Adil Osman
<aAdil Osman
تاريخ التسجيل: 07-27-2002
مجموع المشاركات: 10208

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Re: البى بى سى:تقريرا لمجموعة الازمات الدوليه يدعو لتطبيق عقوبات صارمه على السودان تطال البترول (Re: السنجك)

    اعتبر تقرير لمجموعة الأزمات الدولية أن تجاوب الأسرة الدولية بشكل ضعيف تشوبه الانقسامات فيما يتعلق بإرسال قوات لحفظ السلام تابعة للأمم المتحدة إلى دارفور يلعب لصالح الحكومة السودانية.

    ويشير التقرير إلى أن الدبلوماسية " فشلت " وأن الحاجة أصبحت ملحة الآن لفرض عقوبات موجهة للحيلولة دون تفاقم الوضع الانساني في دارفور.

    ويطالب التقرير بفرض تدابير عاجلة على المصالح الاقتصادية الرئيسية ولا سيما قطاع النفط السوداني.

    ويعتقد أن حوالي 200 ألف شخص قتلوا في النزاع الدائر في اقليم دارفور خلال السنوات الثلاث الأخيرة.

    ظهور بوادر التصدع
    ويقول تقرير المجموعة الدولية إنه طالما لم يشكل العالم جبهة مشتركة حول قضية دارفور فإن الخرطوم ستواصل اغتنام وجود الانشقاقات ظانة بأنه بوسعها أن " تتصرف كما تشاء دون حسيب أو رقيب".

    وتقول مراسلة بي سي كارين ألين إن هناك بوادر انشقاق في موقف المجموعة الدولية.

    فبينما تعتبر دول كبريطانيا والولايات المتحدة إن إيفاد قوات لحفظ السلام تابعة للأمم المتحدة إلى دارفور هو الحل الوحيد الذي يمكن القبول به، يرى لاعبون آخرون كالممثل الخاص للأمين العام للأمم المتحدة في السودان يان برونك ضرورة تحويل الإهتمام نحو دعم القوات التابعة للاتحاد الأفريقي.

    وكانت القوات الأفريقية قد منحت مؤخرا تمديدا في مهمتها إلى غاية نهاية العام الجاري مع الرفع في تعدادها ليصل إلى 11 ألف جندي.

    وترفض الحكومة السودانية باستمرار مطلب استبدال القوات الأفريقية بقوة دولية قوامها 20 ألفا و600 جندي بناء على قرار مجلس الأمن في شهر أغسطس/ آب وذلك بدعوى أن ذلك سيكون بمثابة انتهاك لسيادتها.

    ويوصي التقرير بفرض عقوبات اقتصادية موجهة، مع قيود عسكرية محدودة كحظر الطيران في منطقة دارفور واتخاذ إجراءات من أجل تفعيل دور محكمة الجزاء الدولية المكلفة بالنظر في جرائم الحرب.

    ويذكر في هذا السياق أن الخرطوم تجاوبت مع الضغوط الاقتصادية في الأزمات السابقة كما هو الشأن بالنسبة لما يسمى الحرب على الإرهاب.

    وأعرب التقرير عن خشية المجموعة من أن يكون أي تحرك بديل "متأخرا" طالما أن الوضع الأمني والانساني في المنطقة آخذ في التفاقم.
    ________
    منقول من موقع البى بى سى باللغة العربية
                  

10-12-2006, 07:50 AM

السنجك
<aالسنجك
تاريخ التسجيل: 05-27-2002
مجموع المشاركات: 2695

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Re: البى بى سى:تقريرا لمجموعة الازمات الدوليه يدعو لتطبيق عقوبات صارمه على السودان تطال البترول (Re: Adil Osman)

    فوق......فوق



    السنجك
                  

10-12-2006, 08:22 AM

Mohamed Suleiman
<aMohamed Suleiman
تاريخ التسجيل: 11-28-2004
مجموع المشاركات: 20453

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Re: البى بى سى:تقريرا لمجموعة الازمات الدوليه يدعو لتطبيق عقوبات صارمه على السودان تطال البترول (Re: السنجك)



    السنجك
    here is the full report from The International Crisis Group : x



    Getting the UN into Darfur
    Africa Briefing N°43
    12 October 2006

    OVERVIEW

    The impasse over deploying a major UN peacekeeping force to Darfur results directly from the international community’s three-year failure to apply effective diplomatic and economic pressure on Sudan’s government and its senior officials. Unless concerted action is taken against the ruling National Congress Party (NCP), Khartoum will continue its military campaign, with deadly consequences for civilians, while paying only lip service to its many promises to disarm its Janjaweed militias and otherwise cooperate. No one can guarantee what will work with a regime as tough-minded and inscrutable as Sudan’s, but patient diplomacy and trust in Khartoum’s good faith has been a patent failure. The international community has accepted the responsibility to protect civilians from atrocity crimes when their own government is unable or unwilling to do so. This now requires tough new measures to concentrate minds and change policies in Khartoum.

    UN Security Council Resolution 1706 (31 August 2006) extended to Darfur the mandate of the UN Mission in Sudan (UNMIS), which presently has 10,000 personnel in-country monitoring the North-South Comprehensive Peace Agreement: it “invited” the consent of the Sudanese government to the deployment of 20,600 UN peacekeepers. This expanded UN force was in effect to take over the African Union’s overstretched African Mission in Sudan (AMIS), which – although threatened with expulsion in September – has now been extended to the end of December, with its numbers on the ground expected to grow to 11,000.

    The NCP continues to strongly reject the proposed UN deployment. Its primary motive appears to be a fear that improved security would loosen its grip on the region. Officials responsible for orchestrating the conflict since 2003 also appear to fear that a major body of UN troops in Darfur itself might eventually enforce International Criminal Court (ICC) indictments, although it is not obvious why that risk should be decisively greater for them with an extended UNMIS deployment than it is with the present one.

    In responding to this rejection, full-scale non-consensual military intervention by the international community is not at this stage a defensible or realistic option. But it may be possible to persuade the NCP to alter its policies and consent to the UN mission in Darfur by moving now to targeted sanctions against regime leaders and their business interests – and immediately planning for the establishment and enforcement of a no-fly zone over Darfur that builds on the ineffective ban on offensive military flights the Security Council imposed in 2005. International support for the role of the ICC should be again clearly expressed, with the Court in turn declaring its intention to focus immediately on any war crimes or crimes against humanity committed during the current government offensive.

    The alternatives to such action – radical by contrast with the limp offerings from the Security Council so far – would be additional months of trying to entice the NCP into a more forthcoming position, as some leaders are still trying to do, or total concentration on trying to extend and reinforce the existing African Union AMIS mission, as has increasingly been urged by various policymakers. Crisis Group’s concern is that either of these approaches will be too little too late, given the way the security, human rights and humanitarian situation has steadily deteriorated since the Darfur Peace Accord (DPA) was signed on 5 May 2006 in Abuja:

    The NCP launched a major offensive in August and offered the UN its own “security plan”, involving sending more than 22,000 government troops to Darfur to secure a military victory.
    With support from Chad and Eritrea, elements of the rebel groups that did not sign the DPA have regrouped as the National Redemption Front (NRF) and since late June have launched a series of attacks.
    Violence against women surged, with more than 200 instances of sexual assault in five weeks around Kalma camp in South Darfur alone.
    The lone rebel signatory – the Sudan Liberation Army faction of Minni Minawi (SLA/MM) – increasingly acts as a paramilitary wing of the Sudanese army.
    It has become clearly apparent that, while a political solution ultimately is the only way to end the war and create the conditions allowing millions of displaced persons to go home, the DPA is all but dead: there is a desperate need for the African Union (AU) and its partners to reconstitute a viable, inclusive peace process that builds on its foundations while addressing its flaws, but there is no sign of that happening.
    Divisions have now emerged within the international community over whether to drop the UN mission proposal in favour of a strengthened AU-led mission. Unless these divisions are quickly reconciled, the NCP will exploit them to neutralise international pressure. It is an immediate priority to make AMIS as effective as it can be, but that mission, whose credibility in Darfur is decreasing, is not a substitute for the more robust UN force, which would be able to call upon greater physical and financial resources. The situation in Darfur demands the most effective response possible. That can only come through the full UN deployment, and efforts need to be concentrated to bring it about as rapidly as possible.

    The NCP has skillfully used the confrontation with the international community to silence an increasingly defiant opposition and independent media and a rising chorus of critics from within its own ranks who are upset with the regime’s corruption and moral decay. Changing policies in Darfur and allowing the transition to a UN mission would clearly be traumatic, with serious domestic political and security repercussions. The NCP will only do so if it calculates that the international repercussions for non-compliance outweigh the domestic costs of cooperation. History does offer grounds for belief, however, that it will respond if confronted with genuine pressure. But that requires a change of strategy for the international community, which, in contrast to its generally strong rhetoric, has only rarely brought meaningful pressure to bear on the Sudanese government. This has given Sudan’s ruling elite the belief it can act with virtual impunity in Darfur.

    The recent appointment of Andrew Natsios as U.S. Special Envoy for Sudan and tougher talk out of Washington is welcome, but it is likely that even more could be achieved by implementing and expanding the reach of some of the measures that have already been agreed in the Security Council and elsewhere. Accordingly, the U.S., UN, African Union and European Union, acting together to the greatest extent possible but as necessary in smaller constellations and even unilaterally, should now:

    apply targeted sanctions, such as asset freezes and travel bans, to key NCP leaders who have already been identified by UN-sponsored investigations as responsible for atrocities in Darfur and encourage divestment campaigns;
    authorise through the Security Council a forensic accounting firm or a panel of experts to investigate the offshore accounts of the NCP and NCP-affiliated businesses so as to pave the way for economic sanctions against the regime’s commercial entities, the main conduit for financing NCP-allied militias in Darfur;
    explore sanctions on aspects of Sudan’s petroleum sector, the NCP’s main source of revenue for waging war in Darfur, to include at least bars on investment and provision of technical equipment and expertise; and
    begin immediate planning for enforcing a no-fly zone over Darfur by French and U.S. assets in the region, with additional NATO support; obtaining consent of the Chad government to deploy a rapid-reaction force to that country’s border with Sudan; and planning on a contingency basis for a non-consensual deployment to Darfur if political and diplomatic efforts fail to change government policies, and the situation on the ground worsens.
    Nairobi/Brussels, 12 October 2006
                  

10-12-2006, 08:32 AM

Mohamed Suleiman
<aMohamed Suleiman
تاريخ التسجيل: 11-28-2004
مجموع المشاركات: 20453

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Re: البى بى سى:تقريرا لمجموعة الازمات الدوليه يدعو لتطبيق عقوبات صارمه على السودان تطال البترول (Re: Mohamed Suleiman)



    Highlights on the ICG recommendtions: x

    Apply targeted sanctions, such as asset freezes and travel bans, to key NCP leaders who have already been identified by UN-sponsored investigations as responsible for atrocities in Darfur and encourage divestment campaigns;

    Authorise through the Security Council a forensic accounting firm or a panel of experts to investigate the offshore accounts of the NCP and NCP-affiliated businesses so as to pave the way for economic sanctions against the regime’s commercial entities, the main conduit for financing NCP-allied militias in Darfur;


    Explore sanctions on aspects of Sudan’s petroleum sector, the NCP’s main source of revenue for waging war in Darfur, to include at least bars on investment and provision of technical equipment and expertise;

    Begin immediate planning for enforcing a no-fly zone over Darfur by French and U.S. assets in the region, with additional NATO support; obtaining consent of the Chad government to deploy a rapid-reaction force to that country’s border with Sudan;

    Planning on a contingency basis for a non-consensual deployment to Darfur if political and diplomatic efforts fail to change government policies, and the situation on the ground worsens.
                  


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