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Wednesday November 25, 2009

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Event Summary

In August, the United Nations Security Council authorized a large peacekeeping mission to monitor the Darfur Peace Agreement and provide protection for internally displaced persons and civilians. However, the government of Sudan continues to reject its deployment. Although African Union peacekeepers have agreed to stay on until the end of the year, they are understaffed, under-resourced and have a mandate too weak to offer real protection. The lack of security has undercut aid to hundreds of thousands who have no other means to survive. As the crisis in Darfur worsens and spreads to Chad, the United Nations and U.S. are considering new initiatives.

Event Information

When

Monday, November 20, 2006
10:00 AM to 12:00 PM

Where

Falk Auditorium
The Brookings Institution
1775 Massachusetts Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20036
Map

Contact: Brookings Office of Communications

E-mail: events@brookings.edu

Phone: 202.797.6105

On November 20, the Brookings-Bern Project on Internal Displacement hosted two senior officials, Jean-Marie Guéhenno, Under Secretary-General for Peacekeeping at the United Nations, and Andrew Natsios, U.S. Presidential Special Envoy for Sudan, for a discussion on new initiatives being pursued to address the deteriorating situation in Darfur. Carlos Pascual, vice president and director of Foreign Policy Studies, moderated the discussion, and Roberta Cohen, senior fellow and adviser to the Brookings-Bern Project on Internal Displacement, made introductory remarks.

Transcript

ROBERTA COHEN: This is Brookings' fourth briefing on Darfur over a three-year period. The purpose is to keep attention focused on one of the worst humanitarian disasters in the world and also to stimulate solutions to the crisis. It has become commonplace to note but it nonetheless horrifying that hundreds of thousands of people have died in Darfur, 2.5 million are uprooted from their homes, and 4 million people are totally dependent on the international community for survival. The conflict has also spilled over into Chad and the Central African Republic bringing more displacement and death in its wake, and it threatens to upset implementation of the North-South Peace Agreement in Sudan and the integration of millions of displaced people in the South.

Allow me to recall that at our first briefing in 2004, we asked three questions of Ambassador Richard Holbrooke, Senator Jon Corzine, and Ambassador Francis Deng: What should the United Nations and the United States do to effectively stop the killings and displacement? Beyond diplomatic pressure, would sanctions and military actions be effective in this case? How can the international community best engage the government of Sudan in a political process to resolve the conflict?

These questions still remain pertinent today.

Among the recommendations emanating from the 2004 briefing and from a subsequent one in 2006 with Deputy Secretary of State, Robert Zoellick, were the need for political settlement, for a strengthened African Union force but also for its transition into a United Nations force, the need for increased U.S. financial and diplomatic support especially in engaging China and the Arab League, and for the appointment of a full-time U.S. envoy on Sudan and Darfur. There has been movement on some of these proposals, but the security and humanitarian situation which improved in early 2005 has worsened with military operations going on right now, with large areas inaccessible to the United Nations, and with relief workers under attack.

Today's panel presents an opportunity to look at what steps the United Nations and the United States should be taking to fulfill the international responsibility to protect the people of Darfur.

Participants

Moderator

Carlos Pascual

Vice President and Director, Foreign Policy

Speakers

Andrew Natsios

U.S. Presidential Special Envoy for Sudan, U.S. Department of State

Jean- Marie Guéhenno

Under Secretary - General for Peacekeeping, United Nations


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