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By the end of April:
Sudan expects Darfur peace deal

Sudan said on Friday it expected a peace deal in Darfur by the end of April, but a respected think tank said the conflict could kill thousands more people and spark proxy wars in neighboring countries.

Civil war has raged in Sudan's vast western region since February 2003, pitting rebels against government forces and Arab militias. Tens of thousands have died and 2 million been forced from their homes.

Sudanese Foreign Minister Lam Akol told reporters in Nairobi a new ceasefire proposal by the African Union (AU) would enable Khartoum to make peace with the two main rebel groups quickly.

" The AU has been very optimistic and ... confident that before the end of April a solution will be available in Darfur."

But a hard-hitting report by the International Crisis Group (ICG) said thousands of U.N. peacekeepers must immediately join a stretched AU force to prevent more deaths in Darfur.

Lambasting the international community for its "dismal" response to the conflict, it said failure to deploy U.N. troops could also fan tensions between Sudan and neighboring Chad, which accuses Khartoum of backing rebels intent on overthrowing President Idriss Deby.

" The consequences if these steps are not taken are all too easy to foresee: tens of thousands more lives lost, spill-over of the conflict into Chad and proxy wars that destabilize a wide swathe of Africa," said the ICG report titled "To Save Darfur".

The AU voted last week to extend its 7,000-strong mission in Darfur until September 30, then support "in principle" its transformation into a larger, better-equipped U.N. force.

Sudan says deployment of such a force before a peace deal would mean the end of AU-mediated talks in Nigeria with the two main rebel groups, the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) and Sudan Liberation Movement (SLM).

" FALSE HOPE"
" The problem is there seems to be false hope that a solution will come from outside or will be imposed by the U.N. or NATO and so on," said Akol. "As long as there is war, unfortunately people will have to die, and the U.N. will not stop it."

He said the government would welcome the U.N. troops after a peace deal was reached in April, which he said was a "very realistic" time frame.

Separately, Human Rights Watch urged the U.N. Security Council to break down Sudanese opposition to a U.N. force through targeted sanctions on its leaders, so it can have peacekeepers in place by the time the AU mandate runs out.

" The Sudanese government is blocking a U.N. force because it fears a larger, better-equipped force might hinder its abusive agenda in Darfur," Peter Takirambudde, Africa director at the New York-based watchdog, wrote in a letter to the council.

IGC said since the strategy of relying on the AU mission in Sudan (AMIS) to police Darfur "is at a dead end" and the U.N. must immediately bring in 5,000 soldiers.

" AMIS credibility is at an all-time low, with the ceasefire it could never monitor properly in tatters. In the face of this, the international community is backing away from meaningful action," added the report by ICG researcher David Mozersky.

The first troops should be led by France, which has experience in the area, and the council should follow up by authorizing a 15,000-strong force, ICG said.

" The international record on Darfur, despite the provision of some life-saving humanitarian aid, has been dismal".
ICG said Chadian rebels near the border in the west of Darfur looked poised to invade their country. "The escalating proxy war between Sudan and Chad threatens to produce a new humanitarian catastrophe on both sides of the border," it said.

" If the battleground of Darfur and the chaos there is extended to the west and beyond (into Chad), this will further complicate efforts to improve the security situation," Mozersky told Reuters.
The report said principal blame for the Darfur tragedy lay with the Khartoum government for making "little effort" to stabilize the area and for backing the Chadian rebels.

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Says Morrisey:
The Smiths turned down $5 million reunion offer

Pioneering U.K. modern rock band the Smiths turned down a $5 million offer to reunite at the upcoming Coachella Valley Arts & Music Festival in southern California, former frontman Morrissey said Thursday.

His revelation, during a public interview at the South By Southwest Music & Media Conference in Austin, triggered gasps from the audience. When journalist David Fricke asked if he had considered it, Morrissey replied, "No, because money doesn't come into it," a response that drew applause from the crowd.

Of the critically adored act, which broke up in the late 1980s, Morrissey said, "It was a fantastic journey. And then it ended. I didn't feel we should have ended. I wanted to continue. (Smiths guitarist Johnny Marr) wanted to end it. And that was that."
Discussing his forthcoming album, "Ringleader of the Tormentors," due April 4 via Attack/Sanctuary, the notoriously gloomy singer/songwriter admitted that he's writing songs from a good place these days.

"I'm just seeing lots of joyful things in life, which I didn't in the past," he said, adding slyly, "Which maybe you noticed.

"Politically the world is ridiculous," he said. "But there's still a lot of beautiful things ... Nature saves us, nature calms us down."

Morrissey will first support the album with a European tour that includes a six-week run of sold-out shows in the United Kingdom. A North American leg is also expected.

Coachella, which takes place April 29-30 about 120 miles east of Los Angeles, will feature such acts as Depeche Mode, Tool and Madonna.

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