KHARTOUM, Sept 19: Sudan condemned as 'unfair' on Sunday a new UN resolution calling on Khartoum to restore security to the crisis-wracked Darfur region or face possible sanctions, but said it would abide by the UN's demands.

However, the speaker of the Sudanese parliament cautioned the West not to intervene in his country, warning that it risked opening the "gates of hell". The Sudanese embassy in Washington said the government was committed to the resolution "even though it was unfair and unjust to the Sudan", according to a statement published by the independent Al-Sahafa newspaper.

The paper said the Sudanese cabinet was due to hold an extraordinary meeting on Sunday to discuss UN Security Council Resolution 1564, which threatens sanctions on the country's vital oil industry.

The resolution was adopted on Saturday by 11 votes, with China, Russia, Algeria and Pakistan abstaining. It warns that the Security Council "will envisage" sanctions against Sudan's oil industry unless Khartoum makes good on its promise to protect the population of Darfur.

The resolution was sponsored by the United States, which says Khartoum and its proxy Arab militias are guilty of genocide in Darfur. An estimated 50,000 people have died and 1.4 million been displaced in Darfur, where UN officials say pro-government Janjaweed militias have carried out a scorched-earth campaign of ethnic cleansing against non-Arab minorities over the past 19 months.

The war broke out in February 2003 when rebels rose up against Khartoum to demand an end to the marginalisation of their region, one of the poorest in Sudan. In a fiery tirade, parliament speaker Ibrahim Ahmed al-Taher warned Western nations not to intervene.

"If Iraq opened for the West one gate of hell, we will open seven such gates," Taher was quoted as saying by the Sudanese Media Center, an information outlet affiliated to the government. "We will not surrender this country to anybody."

The UN vote came ahead of a week-long mission to Sudan by the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Louise Arbour, who was due to arrive later Sunday.

Kamal al-Obaid, an official with President Omar al-Beshir's ruling National Congress, said the resolution contradicted a report by UN envoy Jan Pronk and accused the United States of "breaching all international values and norms", Al-Sahafa reported.

Obaid said his government was committed to addressing the crisis in Darfur "not in response to the threat contained in the resolution but in pursuance of the government's unchanging position of resolving all problems through dialogue".

The UN resolution was adopted after three weeks of talks between Khartoum and Darfur rebels in Nigeria were suspended because of disagreements on key issues. Khartoum's chief delegate to the Abuja talks, Majzoub al-Khalifa Ahmed, accused Washington of using Darfur for political purposes ahead of the November presidential election, "forgetting the crimes it has committed in Iraq and elsewhere", Al-Anbaa newspaper reported.

ARAB LEAGUE: The Arab League also rejected the resolution, saying it would not help bring peace to the troubled region. "Imposing sanctions will not help resolve the crisis or encourage the parties to try to end it. In fact, it will have the opposite effect," League spokesman Hossam Zaki told reporters.

He said the League considered it "important that the international community give the parties enough time to implement their obligations and work to get the sides to resolve the crisis instead of a confrontation." -AFP

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