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Militia Leader, Alleged Terrorist, Calls For Islamic ‎Rule In Somalia, End To Interference

ISSUE 195
Front Page
Index

Headlines

Results Of Parliamentary Elections In The Hargeysa Region Announced

TFG Spy Found Aboard A UN Chartered Plane

Cyber-Dating Outsmarts Somaliland Suitors, Worries UN

Interview With Mark Bradbury, Somaliland Poll Observer

Rockshelters Of Las Geel. Republic Of Somalilandt

Yemen Arming Abdillahi Yusuf’s Faction ‎

Militia Leader, Alleged Terrorist, Calls For Islamic ‎Rule In Somalia, End To Interference

Kenyans Advised To Avoid Somali Coastline

People

Somali Poetry Event: The Great Somali Poet Maxamed ‎Xaashi Dhamac 'Gaarriye' In The UK

International News

Pirates: Latest Threat To Africa Food Aid The US Congress Looks At Revising Its Hunger ‎Program

WFP Welcomes Release of Second Food Aid ‎Ship Hijacked in Somalia - Press Release‎

Somali Man Fights Deportation

Yemen Denies Illegal Arms Supply

ANTI TERRORISM LEGISLATION
British Govt Proposes Banning 15 Groups

Ethiopia: Fresh Cabinet Faces As Meles Starts New Term

UN Special Representative To Visit Moscow And ‎Stockholm For Consultations On Somalia Peace Process

SOMALIA: Interim Gov't Denies Violating Arms Embargo

Sacked Somalia Bank Governor Lobbies Donors

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Dueling Priorities For Beijing In The Horn Of Africa

Sacked Somalia Bank Governor Lobbies Donors

Editorial & Opinions

Somaliland Election: An Account Of A Close Observer

Era Of Bipolar Power Structure Dawns In Somaliland

About Kulmiye...‎

Yusuf Uses Office To Arm Himself: The ‎Threat To Somaliland And Somalia

SOMALILAND: A LULLABY IN THE WIND

The Ten Most Important Things Somaliland Should Do To ‎Strengthen Democracy And Gain International Recognition

Starting Young

Tom Cookes, And SBS Radio Journalist Issa Farah Travel ‎To Jowhar In Somalia


NAIROBI, October 13, 2005 (AP) – An influential religious leader and alleged Al Qaeda collaborator has vowed to ‎establish an Islamic state in Somalia, a lawless Horn of Africa nation the United States fears could grow into a ‎major base for Islamic terrorists. ‎

‎“The Western world should respect our own ideas in choosing the way we want to govern our country, the way we ‎want to go about our own business. That is our right,” said Sheik Hassan Dahir Aweys, a key figure in a growing ‎religious camp vying for control of Somalia with two secular factions. ‎

The United States linked Aweys to Al Qaeda shortly after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. Last week, the United ‎Nations reported that he was arming hundreds of men to keep a Western-backed transitional government from ‎taking power in Somalia after years of clan fighting. ‎

US officials have repeatedly expressed concern that Somalia, which has not had a central government since ‎warlords ousted dictator Mohamed Siyad Barre in 1992, could become an Islamic terrorist haven. Investigations ‎have shown that terrorist attacks on Kenyan soil in 1998 and 2002 were launched from Somalia. ‎

In a report earlier this year, the International Crisis Group, a Belgian-based think tank, said the threat of terrorism ‎inspired by an extremist interpretation of Islam “in and from Somalia is real” and identified Aweys as an important ‎Islamist leader. ‎
Speaking by telephone from a mosque in northern Mogadishu, Somalia’s capital, Aweys said Wednesday that ‎allegations he is a terrorist were invented by his enemies. Aweys said non-Muslims too often think that all ‎fundamentalist Muslims are terrorists. ‎

‎“I would advise the Western world to change their mind, because all of the time they call the Islamic countries, the ‎Islamic people terrorists, which is not true,” he said. “That is one of the things that has been pulling Islamists and ‎the Western world apart. ‎

He said he and his followers, who include armed militiamen, would not rest until they had established an Islamic ‎government in Somalia. He said he opposed efforts to install a Western-style democracy and called for the ‎international community to leave Somalis alone to choose their own future. ‎

Aweys said he would wage holy war on any foreign forces that enter Somalia. He said he plans to have an ‎important role in the country’s future. ‎
‎“I can influence all of my people with the faith and our religion,” Aweys said. “The existing government is not an ‎Islamic one and we will be having our own Islamic faith and we will be very strong in influencing our people.” ‎

Aweys did not answer directly when asked whether he has ever had contact with Al Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden ‎or whether he has been accepting funding and weapons from Eritrea, neighboring Ethiopia’s longtime rival. But he ‎said he has the right to make contact with and have relations with anyone he wants.‎


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