From the Los Angeles Times
Old problems haunt new U.N. peacekeepers in Darfur
Rollout of the U.N.-African Union force has
been slow, and equipment is lacking. But expectations remain high.
By Edmund Sanders
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
April 27, 2008
ABOVE SILEIA, SUDAN —
A Russian-made Mi-8 chopper hovers over the scorched remains of this
Darfur village, half-deserted since a government air raid destroyed
scores of homes.
U.N. military engineers peer through portholes, armed with maps and
survey tools they will use to scope out a new peacekeeping camp to be
built in the desert below.
Plans to put a 600-soldier base in
the heart of Darfur's latest trouble spot are part of the aggressive
new strategy of the recently deployed United Nations-African Union
peacekeeping mission. Sileia jumped to the top of the list of proposed
new camps after more than 100 people died in clashes in the area in
February.
But the white U.N. helicopter never lands. Someone
forgot to dispatch a security patrol on the ground to protect the
advance team. So engineers make do with quick sketches during a brief
flyover.
"I don't even want to get into whose fault this is,"
said a fuming Col. Murdo Urquhart, the British army officer in charge
of new camps.
Four months after it took over from the
beleaguered African Union force in western Sudan, the joint U.N.-AU
peacekeeping mission in Darfur is a tale of good intentions and loftier
ambitions, mixed with some of the same issues that dogged its
predecessor. Among the problems are the slow deployment of troops, a
lack of adequate equipment and a shabby network of military bases.
It's
being called the most formidable U.N. peacekeeping mission ever
attempted. Not only will it be the largest when fully deployed at
26,000 troops, but there's also an awkward power-sharing arrangement
with the African Union.
Usually, U.N. peacekeepers are sent to
failed states or countries with weak governments to enforce peace
treaties in a post-conflict environment. But in Sudan, there's a strong
government that consented to the U.N. mission as a result of intense
international pressure. There's no viable peace agreement here. And the
fighting, though it had cooled, may be heating up again.
Despite
the challenges, expectations are high. Many of the more than 2.5
million displaced Darfurians hope stability will return so they can go
home. And the international community is betting big that a robust
presence will end the seemingly intractable conflict.
Most estimates of the death toll since 2003 range from 200,000 to
300,000.
Rodolphe
Adada, the U.N.-AU joint special representative for Darfur, said the
mission should quell violence once it's fully up and running, but he
warned that it would not be a substitute for political dialogue.
"We shouldn't be seen as the solution," he said.
The
mission, with an estimated annual budget of $2.5 billion, has arrived
as the Darfur conflict has grown more complicated. Though frequently
described as a genocide that pits an Arab-dominated government and its
allied militias against non-Arab rebels and villagers, the conflict
today defies easy labels. Arabs are killing Arabs. Africans are killing
Africans. Some former rebels have joined the government and some Arab
militias, known as janjaweed, now fight against it.
At
the same time, general lawlessness and proliferation of arms have
fueled widespread banditry, carjacking and rape. Most recently, Chad
and Sudan have contributed to the violence through a proxy war in the
Darfur region, where they are arming and funding insurgencies to attack
one another.
For the moment, the mission's most pressing
challenge is getting boots on the ground. Fewer than 300 additional
U.N. troops, from nations such as Bangladesh and China, have arrived in
Darfur. The rest of the nearly 9,000 peacekeepers here are African
Union holdovers who just replaced their green AU berets with blue U.N.
helmets.
Richard Williamson, the U.S. special envoy to Sudan,
has called the slow deployment unacceptable, urging the U.N. to
dispatch 3,600 troops by June. But U.N. military commanders in Darfur
foresee a slower rollout, perhaps 2,400 troops by September. Either
way, full deployment of 26,000 isn't likely until 2009.
The blame game
Finger-pointing
abounds. U.S. officials blame U.N. bureaucracy. U.N. leaders say
Western nations won't provide needed equipment, including 24 new
helicopters.
Then there's foot-dragging by the Sudanese
government, which is insisting that U.N. troops come chiefly from
African nations. Sudanese officials say that's because they don't trust
Western nations or their allies.
But African armies are often underfunded, ill-equipped and poorly
trained.
A
typical self-sustaining U.S. Army battalion can be quickly dispatched
just about anywhere because it comes with its own vehicles,
accommodation, generators, mechanics, medics, engineering capabilities
and food services. Poorer African military units sometimes come with
little more than soldiers with guns.
"Not everyone that wants to
give a hand in Darfur meets the standard," said Maj. Gen. Emmanuel
Karenzi, the mission's deputy force commander.
The United States
has offered $100 million for new equipment and urged the U.N. to relax
its standards to allow for a faster rollout. But U.N. officials warned
against moving too quickly, particularly in a hostile environment such
as Darfur, which has few roads, scarce resources and rainy seasons that
make much of the region accessible only by air.
"Numbers must be
matched by capabilities," Karenzi said. Though the mission inherited
about 32 bases from the African Union, many are in poor shape,
requiring new toilets, satellite dishes, ovens and water treatment
facilities. In Kulbus, scores of soldiers recently fell ill with
intestinal worms after drinking untreated water.
Some U.N.
officials say that a sudden boost in troop levels would do little to
protect Darfurians if the peacekeepers must worry about their own
survival. Without adequate support and supplies, new troops might fall
victim to the same problems that plagued the underfunded,
under-equipped AU force.
"If you deployed everyone in the next
three months, you'd have a force that pretty rapidly became
ineffective," the British army's Urquhart said.
Memories of
last year's assault on an African Union base in Haskanita loom large.
Ten peacekeepers were killed when hundreds of armed attackers,
suspected to be rebel factions looking for fresh supplies, stormed the
small camp. The attack cemented the AU's reputation among many
Darfurians as an impotent force.
This month, an unarmed U.N.
convoy was attacked and robbed while returning from a patrol. Mindful
that first impressions are crucial, Karenzi said a Haskanita-style
attack in the early days of the mission could prove devastating.
"It would create a very negative perception," he said. "It would
demoralize the forces."
Emerging
from the shadow of the AU force is another challenge. By the end of the
AU tenure, its troops rarely left their bases, hunkering down in bunker
mentality.
Under the U.N. banner, commanders are working to
inject a new spirit and vitality. More than 130 patrols are conducted
daily, including new nighttime forays. Troops patrol on foot, rather
than remain in trucks, and chat with residents of displaced-persons
camps to explain their mandate. There's a heavy emphasis on hearts and
minds. Soldiers hold hands with children and sit under trees with local
women to share a cup of water.
Skeptics abound
Camp
residents are skeptical. At Zam Zam camp near El Fasher, the forces got
an earful about overcrowding and the scarcity of water.
Haroun
Nemer, one of the camp chiefs, laughed after peacekeepers "introduced"
themselves. "I know them," he said. "They are the same African Union
people as before. Now the hat is blue. But the cap doesn't change
anything."
In nearby Abu Shouk camp, peacekeepers were chased
away by armed residents last month. When the U.N. reported the incident
to Sudanese police, camp dwellers banned peacekeepers from resuming
patrols, accusing them of conspiring with the government.
But peacekeepers say they notice a difference.
"We have more confidence and I feel more productive than before," said
Jules Ntunda, a police advisor from Rwanda who has worked in Darfur for
about a year. "Before, if someone hijacked a car we would stop our
patrols and stay in our tents. Now we are more active."
Adding
to the job satisfaction is the fact that Ntunda, who sometimes went
four months without pay under the AU, is getting a steady paycheck.
Recent
fighting around Sileia provided the first major test of the new
mission's verve. U.N. peacekeeping commanders formally protested the
civilian killings and laid plans for the new camp. But peacekeepers did
not arrive on the scene until nearly four days later, residents said.
"If
it takes four days or more to see what happened, it's too late for the
people," said Imma Vazquez, head of the mission for Doctors Without
Borders in El Geneina.
U.N. officials say their hands are tied until troop levels increase.
"Right
now we can't protect the people," said Col. Amgad Morsy, deputy
commander in El Geneina. "We can't do it with the force we have now. We
just don't have the capacity."
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times