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Ethiopia Denies Troop Presence In Somalia
ISSUE 60
FRONT PAGE
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Somalia And Survival In The Shadow Of The Global Economy - Part 3
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UCID’s Acting Secretary General Resigns

ASAD Group Rewarded with 3 Cabinet Posts

NOAA: Horn Of Africa Drought Concerning

New Administrator Appointed for Hargeisa University

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Ethiopian-American Radio To Spread Information

UNHCR Begins Integration of Somali Bantus

German Navy Team Arrives In Mombasa

Ethiopia Denies Troop Presence In Somalia

Feeling America's Flywhisk

Ecological Sources Of Conflict

Africa's Lost Tribe Discovers American Way

Abdi Abdiraham Added to USA Men's 8K Championships Field

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TNG To Stay In Talks, Mediator Says

UN Humanitarian Coordinator Deeply Concerned About Worsening Humanitarian Situation In Baidoa

Security Council Condemns Violence

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Therapeutic Feeding For Somali Children
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Ahmed Ali "Drum"
Editorial & Opinion
Fraud Prevention in Next Elections

Somaliland Presidential Election Chronicles: The Campaign

A Little Reminder

Letter to Mudane Cabdi Xasan Buuni

Who Armed Iraq?


Nairobi, March 13, 2003 (IRIN): The Ethiopian government has denied accusations by the Transitional National Government (TNG) of Somalia that Ethiopian forces have invaded Somali territory.

In a statement, the Ethiopian foreign ministry said "there is no Ethiopian soldier in Somalia" and described the accusation as "totally groundless and with no grain of truth."

On Tuesday, Muhammad Abdi Yusuf, the deputy speaker of the Transitional National Assembly and acting leader of the TNG delegation to the peace talks underway n Kenya, told IRIN that Ethiopian troops had "occupied parts of Somalia over the past few days." He added, "so long as Ethiopia is part of the mediation group, the TNG will not participate."

Ethiopia, along with Djibouti and the conference's host Kenya, is part of the regional Inter-Governmental Authority on Development (IGAD) technical committee which is steering the talks.

The Ethiopian statement said the TNG was making the allegations because it was unhappy with the progress of the talks in Kenya and was therefore using Ethiopia as a scapegoat in an attempt to scuttle them.

It went on to say that Ethiopia was only interested in peace and stability in the region, "as well as [along] its borders." It challenged the TNG to prove the allegations, and invited any interested party to "visit and verify the presence of Ethiopian troops across Ethiopia's border inside Somalia."

However, TNG Prime Minister Hasan Abshir Farah told IRIN on Thursday that it had "become a habit for them [Ethiopians] to issue blanket denials."

"After continuous denials, [Prime Minister] Meles admitted to having sent troops to Somalia," he said.

In a recent interview with the BBC, Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi admitted that his country had occasionally sent troops into Somalia to attack members of the Islamist Al-Ittihad al-Islami group.

"We know they are there. They know they are there. Let them withdraw," Hasan told IRIN.

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