United States senator Joe Biden said that he would commit US forces immediately to stop militia in Sudan’s Darfur region as long as there were reports of genocide.
Biden, a presidential candidate and chairperson of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said on Monday that in his personal opinion nations had at ”some point to cede their sovereignty” if they engaged in genocide.
Biden, a Democrat from Delaware, said US President George Bush had made clear that sanctions would be the next step if the United Nations was not ready to send a large force to reinforce the African Union troops in Darfur.
More than 200 000 people have died and two million have been uprooted from their homes in the four-year-old conflict between ethnic African repels and the government, backed by the Arab Janjaweed militia.
”I would impose a no-fly zone immediately and I would commit [US] forces to stop the Janjaweed now. But I am not making that decision,” Biden told reporters.
Biden was leading a bipartisan delegation, which conferred with Security Council members, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and Sheikha Haya Rashed Al Khalifa, the General Assembly president on a variety of issues.
Senator Bob Corker, a Tennessee Republican, and representative Benjamin Cardin, a Maryland Democratic, did not join Biden in calling for US troops but stressed that a solution to the Darfur crisis was foremost in the discussions.
”The most urgent conversation was on Darfur and how quickly a [UN] force could get on the ground,” Cardin said.
Sudan’s UN ambassador Abdalmahmood Abdelhaleem, however, was angry at the comments, saying the senators ”should first come with clean hands and apologise to the UN for the mess the United States did in Iraq”.
He said Sudan would decide on a peacekeeping force of more than 20 000 troops and police after the United Nations and the African Union had agreed on a plan and sent it to Khartoum.
”There is good momentum in the region,” he said, calling Biden’s remarks ”unwarranted and out of context”. – Reuters