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Business Community Demands Role In Peace Process
ISSUE 66
Front Page
Index

Feature

- Somalia And Survival In The Shadow Of The Global Economy (Part 8)

Headlines

- KULMIYE Claims Being Ahead of UDUB By 76 Votes
- Somaliland Economy Crippled by Lack of Recognition
- Somaliland Bans Protests
Health
- Drug: The Double Edged Knife (Part 5)
- Polio Cases On The Increase
- 'There's No Room For A Second Chance'

International News

- Djiboutian Editor of Opposition Newspaper Arrested Again
- Air Guardsman Gets Bronze Star for Valor in Somalia
- Two Refugee Boats Sink Off Yemen
- Mogdishu Journalists' Leader in Hiding
- 9-Year-Old Somali Refugee Carries a Load of Adult Responsibilities

Editorial & Opinions

- The Post Election Dispute
- Neo-Communism: The Forty Years War
- Call For Caution in this Historic Transition to Plural Democracy
- Democracy What?
- The People of Somaliland, the True Champions of Peace
- To My Fellow Somalilanders- Business Community Demands Role In Peace Process

Peace Talks

- Business Community Demands Role In Peace Process

NAIROBI, 23 Apr 2003 (IRIN) - The Somali business community has demanded a role in the ongoing peace talks in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi. 

The call came during a two-day workshop for the Somali Business Council (SBC), held last week in Dubai, and jointly organized with the Center for Research and Dialogue (CRD), an affiliate of the War-Torn Societies Project International, according to press statement.

Sharif Ahmad Shino, the SBC chairman, told IRIN that the group comprised members from all Somali clans, and had come together "to see how best we can contribute to the reconciliation process". 

"We have members from all clans, who can bring pressure and influence political leaders," he stated.

Jibril Ahmad Abdulle of CRD told IRIN that any future government in Somalia was unlikely to succeed in establishing itself without the support of the business community. "Without their support it is next to impossible to get a government going," he said. "So it is logical to have them involved." 

Sharif said the business community, more than any other group, wanted a stable government. 

"It is good for business," he pointed out. "We now pay for our security, electricity, water and all the other things a government is supposed to do. This means a lot of overhead costs for businesses, which cut into our profit margins. We would rather pay taxes and leave all that to the government." 

He added that the participation of the business community in the talks could "bridge the gap between the political groups". 

"We can make our economic muscle felt for the good of our country. That is why we should be at the reconciliation talks," he said.

A regional analyst involved in the peace talks told IRIN it was a good idea to involve the business community. 

"They can bring a great deal of pressure, political and economic, to bear upon their respective clan leaders. I am surprised that they have not been invited up to now," he said.

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