U.S.
report links China arms sales to Darfur carnage.
By Paul
Eckert, Asia Correspondent
Reuters
Friday, March 14, 2008
WASHINGTON:
Chinese sales of assault rifles and other small arms to its ally Sudan
have grown rapidly during the Darfur conflict despite a U.N. arms
embargo, a human rights group said on Thursday.
Human Rights First,
a U.S.-based nonprofit group, said a detailed study of Sudanese and U.N.
trade data showed that China was virtually the sole supplier of small
arms to Sudan, which pays for the weapons with its growing oil revenues.
"The people of
Sudan's Darfur region will endure more death, disease and dislocation,
and this will be due in no small part to China's callousness," said the
report, which called on Beijing
to stop all arms sales to Sudan and urged the world to link that
campaign to the Beijing Olympics.
China
bristles at Western criticism that it has not used its influence to
press for an end to the bloodshed in Darfur, which the
United States has labeled as genocide. It angrily rejects efforts to
link its policies to the showcase Beijing Games due to take place this
summer.
China
sold Sudan
$55 million worth of small arms from 2003-2006 and provided 90 percent
of Sudan's small arms since 2004 when a U.N. arms embargo took effect,
the report said.
Chinese-made AK-47
assault rifles, grenade launchers and ammunition for rifles and heavy
machine guns have all flowed into Darfur,
said the report.
ACTION AND RHETORIC
Wang Baodong,
spokesman for the Chinese Embassy in Washington,
said "the conclusions of the report are misleading, and the allegations
against the Chinese government are unwarranted."
"It's another
typical example of a handful of people with political motives trying to
vilify the Chinese government and the Beijing Olympic Games," he said in
a written statement.
International
experts estimate some 200,000 people have died and 2.5 million have been
forced to flee their homes in Darfur since conflict erupted in 2003,
when rebels took up arms against the central government. The government
has mobilized mainly Arab militias to quell the revolt.
Sudan's
refusal to obey U.N. Security Council resolutions banning arms transfers
to Darfur
undercut
China's assertions it could not affect Sudan's behaviour there, the
group said.
"China can exercise
absolute control over its own actions and can stop shipping arms to the
Sudanese government which has publicly stated that it will ignore the
U.N. arms embargo," said Betsy Apple, representing the group.
But Human Rights
First was not advocating a boycott of the Beijing Olympics as some
Darfur activists have called for.
"We believe that
China is particularly vulnerable in the lead up to the Olympics, Apple
told reporters. "We want to see China's concrete action that matches its
rhetoric."
(Editing by Alan
Elsner)
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