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Sudan: $300m to rebuild Darfur
03/10/2007 19:57  - (SA)  

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  • Carter denied access to Darfur
  • Action on Darfur 'long overdue'
  • Elders asked to pressure govt
  • AU wants to respond to attacks
  • UN condemns Darfur attack
  • The Elders arrive in Darfur
  • Compromises needed for Darfur
  • US playing marbles, says Tutu
  • Kebkabiya - Sudan's president has promised to pay $300m in compensation to the country's war-torn Darfur region, tripling a previous pledge, former US President Jimmy Carter said on Wednesday.

    Carter spoke during a tour of Darfur marred by a heated exchange between the 83-year-old former president and Sudanese security, who tried to keep him from visiting a tribal leader.

    Carter told Reuters that President Omar Hassan al-Bashir of Sudan had made the compensation pledge during talks with him and other members of a visiting group of elder statesmen, including Archbishop Desmond Tutu, in Khartoum on Monday.

    "He promised us there would be $300m in all coming to the Darfur region in compensation, $100m coming from the government, and $200m to be a loan from the Chinese," Carter said as he set off on a tour of the northern Darfur town of Kebkabiya with the elders party.

    Sudan promised to pay $30m in compensation to Darfur under the terms of a 2006 peace agreement signed with only one rebel group. Other rebel groups that refused to sign angrily rejected the offer as too low and remained unhappy when it was later raised to $100m.

    Carter gets his way

    Soon after making the statement, Carter publicly clashed with a Sudanese security chief who objected to his attempt to meet a Darfur tribal chief.

    "No you can't go. It's not on the programme," Kebkabiya security chief Omar Sheikh told Carter in a raised voice.

    Carter angrily replied: "I don't think you have the authority to do so. We are going to go anyway. I'll tell President (Omar Hassan al-) Bashir."

    The tribal leader Al-Tayyib al-Bukoura, regional head of the local Fur people, eventually arrived and after refusing to speak in front of Sudanese security, drove off with Carter.

    Displaced people from the town crowded the international visitors, including British tycoon Richard Branson, and slipped notes into their pockets detailing attacks and rapes.

    Graca and Tutu get tough

    Graca Machel, rights campaigner and wife of former South African President Nelson Mandela, was visibly annoyed by security officers crowding around her as she listened to reports of rape from women's groups. She ordered the men to leave.

    International experts say some 200 000 people have died in Darfur since mainly non-Arab rebels took up arms against the government in 2003. Khartoum says only 9 000 have perished.

    Desmond Tutu on Wednesday called on world governments to speed up the deployment of a replacement force of 26 000 joint UN-AU peacekeepers.

    "I am making a call to people of good will ... for goodness sake, tell your governments to get off their butts," Tutu said.

    "It is unacceptable that the AU mission is not better equipped. They couldn't even evacuate the injured after the Haskanita attack because they don't have military helicopters," he told Reuters.

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