China and Russia on Friday rejected calls from European and
African countries to freeze the planned shutdown of a peacekeeping mission to
Sudan's Darfur region.
Britain, France, Germany and the African countries on the
Security Council told the group that the decision on closing the joint
UN-African Union mission should be put on hold while Sudan is engulfed in
crisis.
The council is scheduled to vote on the mandate of the
mission, known as UNAMID, on June 27.
"The situation has evolved, the situation is not the
same in the center, and we cannot proceed as if nothing has happened,"
said South Africa's Ambassador Jerry Matjila.
Russia and China however said the drawdown must continue as
planned with a view to end operations in 2020.
"The Sudanese government has the capacity to maintain
peace and security in Darfur on its own," said China's Deputy Ambassador
Wu Haitao.
China, Sudan's major trading partner, has long supported
Khartoum's view that the conflict in Darfur was winding down and that
peacekeepers were no longer needed.
After a series of phased drawdowns, about 7,200 troops and
police remain in Darfur from the 16,000 deployed at the height of the conflict.
More than 300,000 people have been killed and 2.5 million
displaced in the violence, according to the United Nations.
Russian Deputy Ambassador Dmitry Polyanskiy said the council
was right to pull out peacekeepers and warned against any "outside
lecturing" to Khartoum.
Sudan has been led by a military council since generals
ousted Omar al-Bashir on April 11 after months of nationwide protests against
his three-decade rule.
Protesters remained encamped outside the military
headquarters in Khartoum for weeks afterwards demanding civilian rule, until a
June 3 crackdown that left scores dead.
Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have said the
instability has an impact on Darfur and that peacekeepers should remain.
UN human rights official Andrew Gilmour said there have been
increased reports of killings, abduction and sexual violence in Darfur in
recent months.
Over the past two months, 47 people have been killed in
Darfur, he said.
Sudan's military rulers have issued a decree ordering UNAMID
to hand over all of its camps in Darfur to the Rapid Support Forces, which led
the crackdown on protesters.
But UN peacekeeping chief Jean-Pierre Lacroix said plans to
turn over the camps to Sudanese forces as part of the drawdown have been
suspended.