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Gambian soldiers serving with the United Nations-African Union Mission in Darfur (UNAMID) stand next to wreaths of flowers, El Fasher, North Darfur
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Seven UN peacekeeper were
killed and twenty-two others injured last night when UNAMID peacekeeping forces
were ambushed by a local militia group. The attack took place in the evening
hours during a patrol by peacekeeping forces in northern town of Omhabiba, 100
miles north of the UNAMID headquarters.
UNAMID spokesperson Shereen Zorba says “that this
is the worst attack that the UN mission has to endure so far “. She says such
attacks impede humanitarian work and strains UNAMID peacekeeping efforts. “We
call on the international community to fulfill their pledge to strengthen
UNAMID…this would allow us to do our jobs, without our forces unnecessarily
sacrificing their lives,” she says.
UNAMID has a mandate to “support the
implementation of the Darfur Peace Agreement, and prevent the disruption of its
implementation and armed attacks, and protect civilians, without prejudice to
the responsibility of the Government of Sudan. In this latest attack, militia
forces targeted peacekeepers returning to base after an investigation into the
death of two SLA Minawi faction fighters allegedly murdered by Arab militia.
Zorba says command and control remains a big
problem in Sudan as various militia forces maintain a hostile stance towards
UNAMID. “In our areas of operations,
many people in many of these groups realize the kind of value in terms of
security that we bring to the civilian community,” she says.
However, the dilemma facing UNAMID forces is that
some of the same factions they work with in one area attack them in other areas
of Darfur. Zorba says, “So there is obviously a lack of command and support
among these groups. It is hard to explain the motivation behind such attacks.
Sometimes it is just plain robbery.” she says.
She adds, “Other complex
explanations are possible. But at the end of the day, we are there for the good
of the people.”
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