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VOICE OF AMERICA
SLUG: 2-320481 Sudan / UN Security Council
DATE:
NOTE NUMBER:

DATE=11/17/04

TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT

TITLE=SUDAN / UN SECURITY COUNCIL (L-ONLY)

NUMBER=2-320481

BYLINE=MICHAEL DRUDGE

DATELINE=NAIROBI

CONTENT=

VOICED AT:

// EDS -- Delegation expected between 6-7 am (EST). Watch CN wire //

HEADLINE: UN Security Council to Meet in Kenya

INTRO: The United Nations Security Council is traveling to (has arrived in) Nairobi, Kenya, for a special two-day meeting on the conflicts in Sudan. VOA's Michael Drudge reports from the Kenyan capital.

TEXT: The Security Council meetings on Thursday and Friday are intended to put pressure on Sudan and a southern rebel group to conclude a peace agreement on ending a 21-year war that has claimed about one-and-a-half million lives.

Security Council diplomats say they hope a settlement between the Islamist government of Khartoum and the Christian-led southern rebels could speed up resolution of another conflict in Sudan's western Darfur region, between Arab nomads and black farmers.

The Darfur fighting has killed some 70-thousand people, with another one-and-a-half million forced from their homes. The United States says genocide against Darfurian blacks is being carried out by the government-backed Arab militia, called the Janjaweed.

The Security Council has been divided on how tough it should be with the Sudanese government over Darfur, but an Africa expert with the American-based group Human Rights Watch, Michael Clough, (rhymes with cough) says Sudan will only respond to strong international pressure.

///CLOUGH ACTUALITY///

"We think the U.N. Security Council's action now is very welcome, but we think it important also to remember that the U.N. Security Council responded to this crisis, unfortunately too late, to save the people who have already been victimized. We are hoping that at this meeting the U.N. Security Council will make very clear it's intention to act more strongly and directly against the government of Sudan, in the event that the government continues to fail to disarm the Janjaweed, and take steps to provide security."

///END ACTUALITY///

U.S. United Nations Ambassador John Danforth will preside over of the Security Council meetings in Nairobi. As President Bush's former special envoy on Sudan, Mr. Danforth helped craft agreements between Sudan and the southern rebels on power-sharing, peace and security.

The Security Council will consider a resolution offering economic incentives, in exchange for a final peace deal in Sudan's north-south conflict. The council expects to hear from the chief negotiators, Sudanese Vice President Ali Osman Taha and John Garang, chief of the Sudanese People's Liberation Army. U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan is also expected to attend. (Signed).

NEB/MWD/WD



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