NEWS Wednesday, September 6, 2006 - The Michigan Daily - 5 Annan warns of crisis as African peacekeepers leave AP PHOTO Katie Couric began her tenure as the anchor of the CBS Evening News last night. She Is the first solo network news anchor and will compete against Brian Williams of NBC and Charles Gibson of ABC. Katie Couric delivers Evening News' debut Sudan refuses to allow a U.N.-led force to take over country KHARTOUM, Sudan (AP) - The U.N. secretary-general warned yesterday that Sudan would bear full responsibility for the worsening humanitarian crisis in Darfur, as African Union peace- keepers said they will have to pull out because of the government's refusal to allow a U.N.-led force to take over. The cash-starved and under- staffed African Union force, whose mandate ends Sept. 30, has been unable to halt the violence in Sudan's western region. Sudan, which recently launched a new military offensive against rebels in Darfur, has ordered the Afri- can Union out if it insists on hand- ing over the mission to the United Nations. The absence of any foreign troops in Darfur would likely lead to widespread misery or starva- tion in camps flooded with refu- gees from a bloody conflict that has raged for the past 3 1/2 years. International aid workers - lack- ing any protection - would almost certainly pull out if the 7,000 AU troops leave and are not replaced by U.N. peacekeepers. The U.N. has warned of hundreds of thou- sands more deaths if aid operations collapse. Sudanese President Omar al- Bashir has rejected the U.N. pres- ence as an attempt to impose Western colonial control over his country and has instead offered to send 10,000 government troops to Darfur. Critics say such a move would only inflame the violence. Despite Secretary-General Kofi Annan's sharp warning, the U.N. and the West - preoccupied with crises in the Mideast - may have little appetite or ability to push Sudan hard to comply. Many observers believe Sudan has dug in against a U.N. deployment in the Texas-sized region because it wants to finish off the rebels, and also fears the international force will hunt down officials and gov- ernment allies suspected of war crimes. Annan criticized Sudan's call for the departure of the African peacekeepers and expressed con- cern at its refusal to accept the 20,000-member U.N. force, which would have a stronger mandate to end the fighting. He warned that Sudan would be unable to address the humanitarian disaster. "The international community has been feeding about 3 million people in camps, and if we have to leave because of lack of security, lack of access to the people, then what happens? The government will have to assume responsibility for doing this, and if it doesn't suc- ceed, it will have lots of questions to answer before the rest of the world," Annan said in the Egyptian port city of Alexandria after talks with President Hosni Mubarak. Since the conflict began with ethnic African rebels seeking more autonomy in Darfur, the Sudanese government has been accused of unleashing Arab militiamen known as janjaweed who have been blamed for widespread atrocities, including rapes and killings. Some 200,000 people have died and sev- eral million have been displaced since 2003. Despite a May peace deal signed by the government and one of the three ethnic African rebel groups, U.N. officials and aid workers say the crisis has only deepened in recent months, with violence at a new high. Twelve aid workers have been killed in Darfur this year, most in the last two months. The latest government offensive in northern Darfur, launched Aug. 28, reportedly involves thousands of troops and militias backed by bomber aircraft and helicopter gunships. The military is also believed to be massing more forces in the region. First solo female network news anchor asks viewers to help craft signature signoff NEW YORK (AP) - Katie Couric began her first night as anchor of the "CBS Evening News" on Tuesday by standing in front of a video board displaying a fast-moving run- down of stories ranging from the Taliban to Suri Cruise. "Hi, everyone," she said. "I'm very happy to be with you tonight." She ended the historic evening by ask- ing viewers for help in crafting a distinctive signoff. "But for now, all I have fo say is, I'm Katie Couric, thank you so much for watching, and I hope to see you tomorrow night." Yesterday capped a tumultuous two years for network evening newscasts. For more than two decades, the networks had been the TV homes of Tom Brokaw, Peter Jennings and Dan Rather. Now Couric, the first female network face, will compete against Brian Williams at the top-rated NBC "Nightly News" and Charles Gibson at ABC's "World News." Even before the first commercial break, Couric showed her willingness to try new things with an evening news format that she has called formulaic. She was introduced by a voiceover recorded by the legendary Walter Cronkite, whose tenure as CBS anchor ended in 1981. She quickly introduced a story about the resurgence of the Taliban in Afghanistan, a lengthy exclusive on a relatively slow news day. Correspondent Lara Logan was taken by a Taliban commander to view soldiers openly displaying their weapons less than 10 miles from a U.S. base. That story segued into a conventional report by White House correspondent Jim Axelrod on a speech given by President Bush on the terrorist threat. Recalling her 15 years on NBC's "Today" show, Couric, wearing a white one-button jacket over a black blouse, then interviewed columnist Thomas Friedman of The New York Times about the Taliban, the fight against terror and the upcoming fifth anni- versary of the terror attacks. The end of the broadcast found her leaning against the edge of a desk on the redesigned "CBS Evening News" set, instead of seated behind it. After acknowledging that many people were wondering how she would sign off, Couric played clips of other signoffs, .ranging from Cronkite's "and that's the way it is" to Rather's ridiculed "courage" to Will Ferrell's "you stay classy, San Diego" as the fictitious movie anchorman Ron Burgundy. "I'm not sure any of those will work for me," Couric said, then asked viewers, in all seriousness, to log onto the CBS News web site and send her suggestions. "And who knows," she said, "maybe one will actually stick." 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