2006年VOA标准英语-Darfur Situation Worsens as Stalemate Over UN R(在线收听) |
By Steve Mort In Darfur, violence is increasing. The situation has been deteriorating since a May peace deal between the government and one of the region's rebel groups. Getting the politics right, however, is tough. At recent talks in Ethiopia, Sudan agreed to a so-called hybrid force -- thousands of extra African Union troops with U.N. financial and logistical support. But countries including the United States, which has labeled the Darfur situation genocide, want Sudan to allow in U.N. soldiers from outside Africa. But an American specialist on African affairs, Kirt Young, says the impasse can only be broken by Sudan's Security Council allies -- China and Russia. China is playing a central role in facilitating talks on Darfur. The UN says Beijing and others must demand assurances that an African Union force in Darfur can be effective. And even if future talks do succeed in stopping the fighting, the UN's Jean-Marie Guehenno warns deploying troops will take time. "It would take several months in the best of cases because it would be a huge deployment in the most difficult part of Africa - completely landlocked, no infrastructure - so logistically it's an enormous challenge. It's a much greater challenge than say, Lebanon. In Lebanon there's infrastructure, it's on the coast, it's easy. Darfur is one of the most difficult places where the UN would ever have to deploy," said the U.N. Under-Secretary General for Peacekeeping Operations. But far from being near to deployment, the U.N. is now evacuating its international staff from Darfur because of intensifying violence. More than 200,000 people have been killed since 2003 - and experts like Kirt Young say the region is in free-fall. "We are beginning to see other factors beginning to make the issue even more complicated -- questions of the region being a breeding ground for terrorists and al-Qaida related factions and what have you, which themselves would retard any type of involvement by the international community. You can't talk about this hybrid process in Darfur without addressing these really salient issues on the ground." The violence in Darfur has spilled over into neighboring Chad and the Central African Republic, and six million people face the prospect of starvation. Outgoing U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan presided over U.N. peacekeeping operations during the 1994 Rwandan genocide and now faces the very real prospect of retiring from the world body with possibly an even worse situation unfolding in Darfur. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/12/36238.html |