

Although armed conflict in Darfur continues to leave millions of people homeless, vulnerable to violence, and susceptible to potentially life-threatening diseases, a report released today by the Brookings Institution–University of Bern Project on Internal Displacement says that, contrary to popular belief, African Union (AU) peacekeeping troops have made a difference in the region.
According to the report, their presence has deterred the rape of women, reduced the recruitment of children into armed forces, protected humanitarian corridors and aid convoys, reduced the looting of animals belonging to Arab nomads, and helped displaced persons who returned to their homes. However, the report also finds many shortcomings and offers detailed recommendations to deal with the deteriorating situation in Darfur, including an increase in AU troop strength to at least 20,000.
In the report, Protecting Two Million Internally Displaced: The Successes and Shortcomings of the African Union in Darfur, co-authors William G. O’Neill and Violette Cassis provide a first-hand look at how AU troops on the ground have saved lives and prevented atrocities against internally displaced persons (IDPs) and other civilians, but also suffer from “grossly inadequate” numbers of troops and police, a weak mandate, and limited equipment.
“Darfur has become a test case for African peacekeeping,” says Roberta Cohen, senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and co-director of the Brookings-Bern Project on Internal Displacement. “As millions of men, women and children remain crammed into displaced persons’ camps, and continue to face attacks by heavily armed militias, they look to African Union forces–now some 6,700 in number–to provide them with a degree of protection.”
Based on interviews with AU troops, IDPs, and humanitarian and human rights officers over a seven- month period, the report finds that AU troops did not “stand by and just watch innocent people get slaughtered.” While AU soldiers do not have the strength or authority to remove or disarm Janjaweed and other paramilitary forces from displaced persons’ camps, they have “demonstrated a willingness to patrol, be visible and try to deter violence,” according to the report.
To build on these achievements, the report recommends at the very least a 20,000 strong force with a more robust protection mandate. It offers three principal options to accomplish this: 1) provide the AU with the material and financial support to enable its force to grow and deploy rapidly; 2) merge the AU force with UN peacekeeping forces in southern Sudan, which would give the troops in Darfur the stronger mandate they need and allow the force to draw on the deeper peacekeeping resources and experience of the UN; and 3) call upon NATO or the European Union to contribute their own forces to reinforce the AU and assume responsibility for the operation.
Recommendations in the report to address the AU force’s weaknesses include:
William O’Neill, an international lawyer, trained the UN’s human rights officers in Darfur, Sudan in 2005 and has served in senior positions with UN missions in Kosovo, Rwanda and Haiti. Violette Cassis has worked with UN agencies, NGOs, and the African Union on the protection of internally displaced persons in West Darfur, Sudan for the past year.
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