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Sudan criticised both U.S. vice-presidential contenders on Sunday for suggesting they might support a no-fly zone over Darfur, saying the plan showed they knew little about the conflict.

Many activists have called for the U.N. to police a no-fly zone over the region to stop attacks.

Sarah Palin, the Republican governor of Alaska, said she supported a flight ban in Sudan's remote west during a televised debate with her Democratic rival Joe Biden on Thursday.

Biden, the Democratic senator from Delaware, did not explicitly call for a ban but said: "I don't have the stomach for genocide when it comes to Darfur. We can now impose a no-fly zone. It is within our capacity. We can lead NATO if we are willing to take a hard stand."

But Sudanese foreign ministry spokesman Ali al-Sadig on Sunday dismissed the statements of both candidates saying a no-fly zone would be impractical and useless.

"They know very little about what is going on here," he said. "Their statements were meant for local consumption. They had nothing to do with Darfur."

Sadig said an air ban would be ineffective because the Sudanese armed forces were not using aircraft in their ongoing struggle against rebel groups in Darfur.

He said government planes and helicopters were only being used to fight bandits and protect humanitarian convoys.

"It would be a very short-sighted move. Curbing the actions of the armed forces would impede the flow of humanitarian aid to Darfur and tie the hands of the government in its efforts to prevent attacks on aid convoys," he added.

Earlier his year, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said he would like to move ahead with a no-fly zone for Darfur "if it were at all possible".

But British foreign ministry officials later said they were not pursuing a ban because it would restrict humanitarian work. Darfur's size and a shortage of planes to monitor the ban would also make it "a major logistical challenge", they added. The remote western region is roughly the same size as Spain.


Reuters
http://www.worldbulletin.net/ , printed on 06.10.2008.

 
Home arrow Opinion Articles arrow Gordimer: criticism of Israeli visit is 'misconceived'
Gordimer: criticism of Israeli visit is 'misconceived' PDF Print E-mail
Wednesday, 30 April 2008

By Xolani Mbanjwa

Nobel Prize laureate Nadine Gordimer has rejected claims by international and local organisations that her trip to Jerusalem to attend a festival would give legitimacy to the Israeli state.

Gordimer (84) has come under severe pressure to boycott the International Writers' Festival because it coincides with the Israeli government's 60th celebration of Israeli statehood.

Yesterday she said concerns about her going to the festival were "misconceived".

She said: "My solidarity with our struggle against apartheid surely can leave no doubt in the minds of my comrades and others concerned that I do not support the present (Israeli) government and deplore many of its actions."

Gordimer, said there was "misinformation" about her visit.

She will be Israel from May 11 to May 15.

As part of her visit, she aims to help foster talks between Israelis and Palestinians.

Since her trip to Israel was announced last month, there has been pressure on her not to take part in the event.

However, Gordimer said she was not going to Israel under the "auspices" of the Israeli government but was honouring an invitation by the Konrad Adenauer Institute.

"The purpose (of my visit), conditions on which I have agreed to participate, are for writers to discuss their responsibilities to their art, their communities, their countries, and the world we share."

Two weeks' ago, the British Committee for the Universities of Palestine (BCUP) urged Gordimer to reconsider her trip saying it was "dispiriting" that a writer of her standing was prepared to appear in a city which was under military occupation and "founded on ethnic cleansing".

"By taking part in an event substantially funded by the Israeli ministry of foreign affairs, you will be lending credibility to the state that has for decades subjected Palestinian towns and villages to collective punishment and boasts of its extrajudicial killings," the BCUP said in a letter to Gordimer.

Source: Pretoria News

 

Last Updated ( Wednesday, 18 June 2008 )
 
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