A Sudanese minister has said his country might pull out of the African Union if the AU's Peace and Security Council approves replacement of the AU force in
Alsammani al-Wasilla,
AU foreign ministers are to meet on 10 March in
Earlier, Omar al-Bashir, the Sudanese president, warned Darfur would become a "graveyard" for any foreign military contingent entering the region against
AP has quoted the top UN envoy in
On Tuesday, Jan Pronk said an anti-UN climate is heating up strongly in the Sudanese capital, with threats and warnings, and fear that handing over to a UN force would put Sudan "in the same situation as Iraq a couple of years ago".
On 12 January, ambassadors on the AU's Peace and Security Council agreed in principle to hand over peace-keeping to the UN but left a final decision to a ministerial meeting scheduled for Friday.
The UN Security Council has authorised the start of planning for a takeover, and John Bolton, the
Earlier this month, George Bush, the
strongest statement of support yet for an expanded international role in Darfur, backing a larger force for
Pronk, however, said a Nato-led force in
"As soon as you make clear to them that there will be decisions without consultation and just come in, then they speak of recolonisation, invasion, imperialism and they speak about
"You need either an AU force which is effective, and the present one is too small, not strong, big, etc., enough, or you need the UN," he said. "There is, in my view, no alternative."
Pronk said the situation in
That means a robust force is still needed to prevent attacks as well as a peace agreement to end the conflict.
Air support
Meanwhile, Kofi Annan, the UN secretary-general, has proposed that Western powers provide air support for AU troops trying to keep the peace in
"The support to AMIS (African Union Mission in
perhaps include the provision of new and additional capabilities,
including close air support," he wrote in a confidential letter to
Annan said:"I would be grateful if governments in a position to provide such capabilities at short notice could consider this possibility."
An estimated 180,000 people have died, mainly of hunger and disease, and some two million have been displaced since dissidents from Darfur's ethnic African population revolted three years ago, accusing the Arab-dominated government in Khartoum of discrimination and decades of neglect.
The Sudanese government is widely alleged to have unleashed Arab militias who carried out sweeping atrocities against ethnic African villagers.
Powers to army
In an apparently unrelated development, the Sudanese army has introduced major changes to the structure of the armed forces, creating for the first time a joint chiefs of staff command, Aljazeera reports.
The new changes grant more powers to the Defence Ministry to assume full responsibility for strategic planning for the country's defence policy.
"The changes were inevitable in order to upgrade the combat and defence capabilities of the armed forces to protect the country's borders against external threats," Abdul Rahim Mohammed Hussein, the Sudanese defence minister, said.
PHOTO CAPTION
Sudanese displaced children are seen from inside a tent in the Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) camp of Drage on the outskirts of the town of