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Somalia Faces Threat Of New Civil War

ISSUE 197
Front Page
Index

Headlines

A Small Arms Registration ‎Drive Meets Success In Buroa

Inter-Connection Service Established ‎By Telephone Companies

Somaliland Opposition Parties ‎Form Parliamentary Coalition

United Nations Special Representative ‎to Visit Hargeisa, Somalia

Somali Warlord Says May Down Planes In Airport Row

Owners Of Seized Ukrainian Ship To Pay ‎Ransom To Pirates Off Somali Coast

Somalia Faces Threat Of New Civil War‎

Local & Regional Affairs

Interview With Maxwell Gaylard, UN ‎Resident And Humanitarian Coordinator‎

Djibouti Suspends Judicial Cooperation ‎With France‎

EASTERN AFRICA: Countries Prepare To ‎Control Possible Spread Of Avian Flu‎‏‎

Trade Union Protests Harassment Of Workers In ‎Mauritius, Djibouti‎

Somali Zone Instability Threatens ‎Security In Somaliland

Somali Warlord's Son Surrenders Landmines

International News

Leaders, Friends Remember Rosa Parks' Life

Resettlement Officials Expect More Refugees ‎From Somalia‎

Trader And Son Held Over Drugs In Textile Cargo

UN Launches 10-Year Campaign For ‎AIDS-Affected Kids

Dubai Imposes Visit Visa Curbs On Somalis ‎And Other Five Countries

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

What Lessons Are There To Draw From Reg ‎Keys' Historic Attempt To Unseat Blair

EXCESS BAGGAGE‎‎

Ethiopia: International Relations And Defense

Somaliland: The 1960 Independence And ‎Union With Somalia

People

 

Opinions

The Vanishing Trees of Hargeysa

In The “War On Terror” Somaliland ‎Must Fight On Two Fronts

Somaliland: The Oasis Of ‎Democracy In A Troubled Region

Rayale Paints Himself In A Corner

Congratulations To The Two Women MPs

The President Has Lost The Plot

Somaliland President Spoke; For ‎The Record, Enough Is Enough!‎

Stop Railroading Of The New Mps ‎In Somaliland


Nairobi , Kenya , October 22, 2005 (AP) – With too many weapons, too little food and three factions vying for control, Somalia 's anarchy is overwhelming its new government even before it can establish itself.

The competition for power, which threatens to trigger another civil war, could combine with a potential food crisis and repeat the disaster that followed the collapse of Somalia 's last regime in 1991. U.S. forces under U.N. command went into the Horn of Africa nation to help the starving, and other nations joined them, but the U.N. failed to set up a viable government.

Already, at least one al-Qaida cell is believed to have set itself up, and experts agree that another civil war could create an opportunity for Islamic extremists to take power.

Homegrown fundamentalists have set up an Islamic court system, and militias move freely in some parts of Mogadishu , the capital, enforcing the court's rulings by shutting bars and destroying shops that sell pirated DVDs and music cassettes.

The United States has long feared that Islamic militants may take advantage of the clan-fueled anarchy to replicate the Taliban's Afghanistan .

Heightened tensions in the capital come as poor rainfall, mass displacement of farmers due to fighting and extensive environmental destruction set the stage for widespread hunger.

The U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization is calling for contingency planning for southern Somalia . "Civil insecurity and unrest continues to be one of the main factors contributing to food and livelihood insecurity throughout the region," the FAO's Food Security Analysis Unit said in its October report.

Most Somalis already depend on handouts. Many live in wretched camps, their homes destroyed in clan fighting. The feared crop failure could increase their dependency on foreign food aid, already made tenuous by the instability.

A year-old transitional government is meant to bring peace and the first central government in 14 years, but has split in two. The secular president and prime minister are based in the small town of Jowhar , while the warlords of Mogadishu , some of them also Cabinet ministers, have stopped cooperating until they get some concessions from the president.

Forming a third force are fundamentalists who will settle for no less than an Islamic government, one of its leaders, Sheik Hassan Dahir Aweys, told The Associated Press in an interview this month.

All three sides have received large shipments of arms — often from neighboring countries hoping to gain influence with Somalia 's competing clans — setting the stage for renewed war, according to the U.N. Monitoring Group on Somalia . It has reported to the Security Council that there is a "severely elevated threat of widespread violence in central and southern Somalia ."

Since none of the three factions is believed to have sufficient firepower to defeat the other, no one knows how long the stalemate might last.

Prime Minister Ali Mohamed Gedi's government, the product of the 14th peace process in 15 years, originally included all of the key warlords and received a great deal of international backing.

"We are trying to calm the militias, but it is not an easy task to restore security and stability in the country," Gedi said in an interview in neighboring Kenya .

He dismissed the schism within his Cabinet, pointing out that out of 42 members, only five were in Mogadishu and refusing to cooperate with him. "It is not as bad as people are saying," he said.

But it is bad enough to split the international community. Diplomats can't agree on whether to throw their full weight behind Gedi and President Abdulahi Yusuf, or wait and hope the Mogadishu warlords can be coaxed back into the peace process, officials familiar with ongoing discussions said.

While the four key militia leaders in Mogadishu control the only city in the country and most of Somalia 's economy, the only thing they seem to share is a hatred for Yusuf, and what they say are his dictatorial inclinations. While reconciliation efforts are under way, few hold out any hope of success.

Waiting in the wings are Somalia 's fundamentalist Muslims, some of whom are listed by the U.S. State Department as al-Qaida collaborators. The most prominent is Aweys.

While he won't address allegations he's had contacts with al-Qaida, he doesn't hide his opposition to Yusuf, his readiness to declare a jihad should foreign peacekeepers enter Somalia , or his plans to establish an Islamic government.


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