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Russia might send peacekeepers to Sudan
Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a resolution that would have Russian troops join a proposed U.N. peacekeeping operation in Sudan, the Kremlin said Thursday.
The resolution calls for Russia to send units from the Interior Ministry, which has both police and military forces.
Sudan's government and rebels in the south signed a Jan. 9 peace deal to end the African nation's long-running civil war, setting up a national power-sharing administration with an autonomous south.
While Russia's military recently announced plans for a new unit fully dedicated to peacekeeping operations, Moscow has curtailed its participation in such operations abroad in the past few years, citing financial concerns.
The final contingent of Russian forces left Kosovo in 2003 after four years of peacekeeping in the Balkans.
In a second action related to African conflicts, Putin signed a decree Thursday prohibiting the sale of arms and ammunition to Ivory Coast in order to abide by a weapons embargo imposed by the United Nations in November. |
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