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TNG Says It Will Not Leave Kenya Peace Conference
ISSUE 63
FRONT PAGE
Feature
Somalia and Survival in the Shadow of the Global Economy - Part 6
Headlines
UK Support For Somaliland Presidential Election

Mistakes by Interior Minister to Cost UDUB Votes

Terrorists Use Somalia As Hub

Health
Drug - The Double Edged Knife (Part Three)

Cholera Outbreak Confirmed In Mogadishu

Daktari: The Flying Doctors Of East Africa

Editorial & Opinion
The International Community and Somaliland's Presidential Elections

Taking the Tiger by the Tail: The National Electoral Commission and the Presidential Elections

Put The Brits In Charge - The Best Postwar Iraq Plan

Worse Than War

War Is Ugly; Do We Need To See It Up Close On TV?

Aerial War Has a Short, Nasty History

40 Million Africans Face Starvation

Somaliland And The Crises In Puntland

International News
Iraqi President Appears In Public Walkabout

US Commander Relieved Of Post In Iraq

Fierce Clashes For Control Of Baghdad Airport

History Warns Cost Of Urban War Is High

Killing The Few To Liberate The Many Is A Line Most Iraqis Reject

Britain, US Drift Apart

Peace Talks
TNG Says It Will Not Leave Kenya Peace Conference

SRRC Opposes Harmonisation Committee


NAIROBI, 31 Mar 2003 (IRIN) - A spokesman for TNG Prime Minister Hassan Abshir Farah said on Monday that Somalia's Transitional National Government was not planning to leave peace talks in Nairobi, Kenya, despite a meeting in Mogadishu at the weekend between the TNG and faction leaders.

Ahmed Isse Awad, head of the prime minister's office, told IRIN the meeting was not an alternative to the Kenya conference. He described it as a consultative meeting to discuss ways of bringing stability to the Somali capital. 

The TNG and various faction leaders said on Saturday they had agreed on an administration for Mogadishu and measures to bring peace to the capital. This came after a closed door meeting between TNG President Abdiqassim Salad Hassan, faction leaders Mohamed Qanyare Afrah and Osman Ali Ato, and members of the Juba Valley Alliance and the Rahanwein Resistance Army (RRA).

Qanyare reportedly said the meeting had also agreed to convene a national reconciliation conference in Somalia, because the conference in Nairobi - sponsored by the regional Inter-Governmental Authority on Development (IGAD) - was not achieving anything.

Several groups attending the Nairobi talks on Monday held a joint press conference, at which they denounced the Mogadishu initiative. These groups included the opposition Somali Restoration and Reconciliation Council (SRRC), a TNG splinter group which has been supportive of the Nairobi conference, and representatives of civil society.

SRRC co-chairman Hussein Aideed said the Mogadishu initiative had come from leaders who were now trying to undermine the Nairobi conference. He said the Nairobi peace talks were not collapsing but were soon to enter the crucial, power-sharing stage. Aideed called on those leaders in Mogadishu to come and take an active part in the process. He added that he hoped it would produce a broad-based government for Somalia by June.

TNG splinter group leader Abdirahman Nur Mohammed Dinari told IRIN that he also saw the Mogadishu meeting as an attempt to undermine the Nairobi talks. Dinari said Mogadishu’s problems needed to be settled by all Somalis.

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