PM increases aid to Darfur by $40 million
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23/May/2006 3:03PM

Canada will immediately increase its aid to Darfur by $40 million, Prime Minister Stephen Harper announced Tuesday.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper announced Canada is increasing aid to Sudan's violence-plagued Darfur region. He is accompanied by Foreign Affairs Minister Peter Mackay. (Fred Chartrand/ Canadian Press)

RELATED: Violence worsening in Darfur: reports

Harper said Canada will continue to provide humanitarian aid, which includes food and water and to help build sanitation services, to the violence-plagued region in western Sudan.

He made no mention of whether Canada will provide peacekeeping troops, saying only that the government will help the African Union implement the Darfur peace agreement and lay the ground work for a United Nations peace mission.

FROM MAY 16, 2006: Security Council sending team to Darfur to pave way for peacekeepers

A recent Security Council resolution stated that a UN force will take over the peacekeeping responsibilities from an under-equipped African Union mission.

The African Union has been unable to stop the violence that has claimed more than 180,000 lives during the three-year rebellion in Darfur.

Earlier this month, Harper suggested that any help for Sudan would not include any major troop contribution.

He said the situation in Darfur can't be changed overnight and that the important first step is to normalize and stabilize the area.

"Make no mistake, our government is well aware this will be a long and arduous process," he said.

Harper's announcement comes as two new human rights reports warn the violence in the region is getting worse.

In the past three years, Darfur has become a drought-plagued killing ground, forcing more than 2.5 million people to leave their homes in a search for safety.

Fighting in the region began in February 2003, when rebels from black African tribes took up arms, complaining of discrimination and oppression by Sudan's Arab-dominated government.

Since then, accounts have surfaced of mass rapes and killings by the Arab janjaweed militia members, who are rumoured to be getting support from the Sudanese government.


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