200000 கருப்பினத்தவரை கொன்று அவர்களை அவர்களது வாழ்விடங்களிலிருந்து துரத்திய அரபுக்களின் அராஜகம் தொடர்கிறது.
இப்போது டார்பரின் அகதி முகாமிலும் தாக்குதல் நடந்திருக்கிறது ஏராள்மான கருப்பின முஸ்லீம்கள் கொல்லப்பட்டுள்ளதாக ஆப்பிரிக்க யூனியன் தெரிவித்துள்ளது.
இந்த அரபுகள் தங்கள் வன்முறை மார்க்கத்தை விட்டு அமைதி மார்க்கம் வர இறையை இறைஞ்சுவோம்
AU spokesman: Number of people killed, injured in violence at South Darfur camp
The Associated PressPublished: October 20, 2007
KHARTOUM, Sudan: A number of people have died and others have been injured during recent violence at a camp in southern Darfur, a spokesman for the African Union said Saturday.
The AU's Noureddine Mezni would not say exactly how many people were killed or injured in clashes Thursday at the Kalama refugee camp, which is southeast of the South Darfur capital, Nyala.
"Investigations are still under way and until those investigations are completed we would not be able to give specifics," Mezni, the spokesman of the AU, told The Associated Press.
Al Sahafa, the independent daily newspaper reporting from Darfur, said at least five people were killed and nine others were injured inside the Kalama camp. The newspaper reported that senior government officials, including the interior and defense ministers and the national intelligence chief, are in the region to try remedy the situation.
Al Sahafa said the clashes were sparked by differences among tribal groups that signed a peace agreement with the Sudanese government in 2006 and those who did not sign the agreement.
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The violence comes a week before Darfur rebel factions and the government are set to meet in Libya to try to put an end to more than four years of violence in the war-torn region.
Fighting broke out in the western Sudanese region in 2003, when ethnic African rebels took up arms against the Arab-dominated central government, accusing it of discrimination.
Khartoum is blamed for indiscriminately retaliating against black civilians. More than 200,000 people have died and 2.5 million been chased from their home despite an African Union peacekeeping mission deployed in the region.
The 7,000-strong AU force is to be replaced in January by a hybrid force of 26,000 AU and U.N. peacekeepers.
"We call upon all parties to refrain from any escalation of the situation, especially at a time preparations are being made to engage in the peace negotiations in Sirte, Libya," Mezni said.
He would not say who was responsible for the latest violence, other than to say a "number of parties were implicated."
"But we can confirm that a number of persons were killed and others are missing, and the investigations are still going on about the whole episode." Mezni said.
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