Rebels reject Darfur summit
2005-04-04 10:56
Cairo - One of the main rebel groups in the troubled western Sudan region of Darfur on Monday rejected a planned summit in Egypt this month to discuss the two-year-old conflict.
"Those mini-summits do not serve the cause of Darfur nor that of the Sudanese people," Sudan Liberation Movement chief Abdel Waheed Mohammed Nur told reporters.
Egypt is to host a summit in the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh on April 20 with leaders from Chad, Egypt, Libya, Nigeria and Sudan to try to find a solution to the Darfur crisis.
But Nur said he considered such summits were "damaging because the Sudanese government exploits those mini-summits like a mark of support which only increases its stubbornness".
A similar five-way meeting over Darfur - also without the presence of the rebel movements - was held in Libya in October last year but did not produce any results.
The Sudanese government crackdown on an uprising launched by rebel groups in Darfur in February 2003 has led to what the United Nations has described as the world's worst continuing humanitarian crisis, with tens of thousands dead and 1.6 million people displaced.
- SAPA