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World|Wed, Oct. 03 2007 02:40 PM EDT

Tutu, Carter Foster Peace in Darfur

By Ethan Cole|Christian Post Reporter

Nobel peace laureate Desmond Tutu met up with former U.S. president Jimmy Carter in Darfur Tuesday to promote peace in Sudan’s war-ravaged region.

  • Jimmy Carter
    (Photo: AP Images / Abd Raouf)
    South African Nobel peace prize laureate Desmond Tutu, 2nd left, ex-US president Jimmy Carter, 3rd right, and former United Nations envoy Lakhdar Brahimi, 2nd right, arrive at Khartoum airport in Sudan Sunday, Sept. 30, 2007 as part a group known as The Elders hoping to aid peace efforts in Darfur. The mission, which also includes former South African president Nelson Mandela's wife, Graca Machel, is the first for The Elders - a group launched by fellow Nobel laureate Mandela in July to help reduce conflict and despair in the world.

The two high-profile humanitarians were part of a delegation of prominent statesman, known as “The Elders,” visiting Darfur this week as peace talks are set to start in Libya and the first team of the U.N.-African Union peacekeeping force is slated to deploy later this month.

The visit also comes days after an unprecedented attack on African peacekeepers in northern Darfur left 10 dead and dozens injured and missing. It was the deadliest assault on A.U. forces since the 7,000-strong mission was deployed to western Sudan in 2004.

“We are not here on a sightseeing tour. We hope we can do something that will make a significant difference…and bring peace,” said South African Archbishop Tutu, according to The Associated Press, after the delegation arrived in El Fasher – the capital of North Darfur province.

Tutu and Carter are leading the delegation which includes billionaire businessman Richard Branson; Graca Michel, wife of former South African president Nelson Mandela; and several prominent former statesmen from Africa.

Delegates will meet with refugees, non-governmental organizations, and officials to facilitate a peaceful solution in Darfur, where some 200,000 people have been killed and more than 2.5 million people displaced since 2003.

Khartoum is widely accused by both Darfurians and the international community of unleashing the pro-government janjaweed militia on Darfurians after rebels from ethnic African tribes in the region rose up against the central government.

U.S. President George W. Bush has condemned the violence in Darfur as “genocide.”

“Maybe some don’t think it’s genocide,” said Bush on Sept. 25 at the U.N. Security Council meeting, according to Bloomberg. “If you are mercilessly killed by roaming bands, you know it is genocide. And the fundamental question is, are we in the free world willing to do more?”

Carter said the main goal of the three-day visit to Sudan is to seek free and fair elections for what would be the first democratic election in Sudan in 2009.

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