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Thursday, 14 February, 2002, 14:32 GMT
Sudan apologises for food aid bombing
SPLA rebels
Sudan's rebels have fought the government for 18 years
The government of Sudan has apologised for a bombing raid on civilians collecting food in the south of the country last weekend which killed two children.


The Sudan Government would like to express its sorrow over this regrettable incident, which took place as a result of an unintended technical fault

Government statement
A statement from the Foreign Ministry in Khartoum said the government expressed its deepest regrets for the bombing.

A government plane dropped six bombs on Sunday on civilians collecting food dropped from a World Food Programme aircraft around the town of Akuem in the southern province of Bahr el-Ghazal.

Government troops are battling rebel forces in the area.

'Technical fault'

"The Sudan Government would like to express its sorrow over this regrettable incident, which took place as a result of an unintended technical fault," the statement said.

US Senator John Danforth
Sudan promised US envoy John Danforth it would end such bombings
However, it did not explain what the fault was.

The World Food Programme, whose depot was struck, said a 12-year-old girl and another child died in the attack.

Sudan said it would endeavour to ensure such incidents did not happen again.

The United States has described the attack as horrific and senseless and said that Khartoum had broken a recent pledge to stop bombing civilian targets for four weeks.

Sudan and rebel forces agreed to a ceasefire in January which covers the central Nuba mountains region but not the town where the bombing took place.

Some two million people have died in fighting between the Muslim government in Khartoum and the mainly Christian rebels in the south, who want autonomy.

See also:

15 Nov 01 | Africa
Sudan ceasefire allows aid drops
07 Jan 02 | Africa
Sudan rebel groups merge
02 Jun 01 | Africa
Sudan summit fails to agree truce
24 May 01 | Middle East
Timeline: Sudan
24 May 01 | Country profiles
Country profile: Sudan
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