Home>News Center>World | ||
Donor nations pledge $4.5b to help Sudan
Donor countries pledged to give $4.5 billion over the next two years to cover Sudan's humanitarian and reconstruction needs, organizers of a 60-nation conference said Tuesday.
The United States was a major donor, pledging $1.7 billion.
"I think the main point is that we have a strong commitment to Sudan," Hilde Frafjord Johnson, Norway's development aid minister, said in closing the two-day conference.
A peace accord signed in January ended a 21-year civil war in southern Sudan, but violence continues in a separate conflict in the troubled western region of Darfur.
Johnson cautioned that collecting the exact amounts promised from donors could be difficult, but said she considered the pledges a guarantee that most basic needs would be met.
John Garang, a former southern rebel leader who is now a member of Sudan's new government, said everything — from roads to power — was needed in the south.
"Give me $10 billion, and I assure you, I will spend it," Garang said.
U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan said Monday that $2.6 billion was needed by 2007 to help Sudan, much of it as immediate cash to prevent 2 million people in the south from running out of food within weeks.
At Tuesday's session, Deputy Secretary of State Robert Zoellick announced that the United States had pledged $853 million for this year, and that the U.S. administration had asked lawmakers for almost $900 million more.
"This is a time of choosing for Sudan," said Zoellick. Either build peace, democracy and economic recovery or "Sudan could slip back into the depths" of conflict, he said. |
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||