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Peace Process On Course, Says Kenyan Ambassador
ISSUE 108
Front Page
Index

Headlines

- USAID Official Says Somaliland Is A Good Place For Investment

- Interview With Andrew B. Sisson, USAID’s Regional Director for east and southern Africa
- UNESCO Asked To Return Manuscripts For Grade 5-8 Textbooks

- Somaliland Forum criticizes UNPOs' censorship of Somaliland Textbooks

- Bill Banning Plastic Bags Introduced By: Rep. Ismail H Farah, Mait District, Sanaag

- Hargeisa Urban Household Economy Assessment, Pt. IX

Health

- Greater Horn Suffers

- The Real Time Bombs

International News

- German President To Visit Africa On Footsteps Of Chancellor

- Freed UN Worker Speaks Of Ordeal In Somali Gunmen's Hands

- Still Striving For Equality

- Compensation Splits 2 UK Army Rape Families

- Mixed Results From Police-Somali Meeting
- ‘Old Guard’ Shares Skills With Djiboutian Army

Peace Talks

- Kenya Asks Ethiopia To Support Somali Peace Talks

- EU Hails Somalia Peace Agreement

- Peace Process On Course, Says Kenyan Ambassador

- It Is Now Or Never For Somalia

People

- U.S. Prosecutors Want To Hold Somali-Born Canadian

- Somali Decision Welcomed

Editorial & Opinions

- Somaliland Should Stay The Course In The East, Reach Out To Abdillahi Yusuf's opponents

- Somaliland’s Eastern Strategy Is Working

- The Making of the New Man

- The Lure of Mogadishu & The Shame of Siilanyo
- Masquerading Successful Somaliland As Failed Somalia

- The Only Solution For The Somali Crisis Is To Recognize Somaliland Republic

- Somaliland, The Boqor, And Puntland


NAIROBI, 12 Feb 2004 (IRIN) - The peace process under way in Kenya is on course and will move into its final phase soon, according to the Kenyan ambassador to Somalia.

Ambassador Muhammad Abdi Affey told IRIN on Thursday that a plenary of the conference would be convened "within the next few days" to endorse the agreement signed by the Somali leaders on 29 January.

The leaders of the Somali groups meeting in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi, on that day signed what has been described as "a landmark breakthrough" agreement on a number of contentious issues that had earlier been plaguing the peace talks.

The agreement passed its first hurdle when the Transitional National Assembly of Somalia, gave it its blessing in the capital, Mogadishu, on 8 February.

Affey said that when the document is presented to the plenary session he expected it to be endorsed. "We are encouraged by the commitment of the leaders and we are confident of a positive outcome," he asserted. He said that preparation were under way to bring traditional leaders from Somalia to the venue of the conference.

They would have an important role in that final stage, for they would not only participate in the selection of future parliamentarians but would also "have to endorse the final list and give legitimacy to the final outcome and the process as a whole", a Somali delegate told IRIN.

Preparations for final phase of the peace talks were proceeding smoothly, an IGAD source involved in the talks said. "We are putting all the pieces together, so we don't have any hitches," he told IRIN, adding that this phase "might take two months or more".

This final phase involves the contentious issue of power-sharing, and therefore "we should not rush it, but take as much time as we need to make sure that the outcome is acceptable to both the Somalis and the international community," he stressed.

Meanwhile, thousands of demonstrators had reportedly taken to the streets of Mogadishu on Wednesday, a local journalist said. "They were chanting slogans in support of the recently signed agreement and calling on the Somali leaders for once to keep their word", he told IRIN on Thursday. A much bigger demonstration in support of the peace process is planned for next week, said the journalist.


 

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