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Frontline States Say They Are United
ISSUE 78
Front Page
Index

Headlines

- Local Drug Baron to Sue Haatuf Newspaper for Defamation

- Warplanes Strike Somaliland Eibaat Island

- Somaliland Sets Terms of Dialogue with Somalia

Health

- Drug: The Double Edged Knife (Part 15)

International News

- EU Support For Upgrading Infrastructure in Border Corridor

- EU Backs IGAD on Somalia Peace Process

- Somali Influx Gets Mixed Carolina Welcome

- Community Welcomes Its First Kids' Bookstore

- Body Found in U.K. Fuels Iraq Row

Peace Talks

- Somalia Protesters Tackle Cairo

- Statement on Somalia by the Security Council

- Frontline States Say They Are United

- Amnesty Urges "Central Role" For Human Rights Activists

Editorial & Opinions

- The Mysterious Attack on Eibaat Island

- The Lies and Deceptions of Abdiqasim Salad, Djibouti, BBC & IRIN

- Intimidating the Press

- A Rich Nation, a Poor Continent

- Falling From "Hanoi"


Nairobi, 18 Jul 2003 (IRIN) - The frontline states, bordering Somalia, are united in their support for a successful outcome to the Somali peace talks currently underway in Kenya, according to a Kenyan foreign ministry statement.

It quoted Foreign Minister Kalonzo Musyoka as saying that "contrary to recent media reports, the frontline states [Kenya, Djibouti, and Ethiopia] have, and will continue to urge the parties participating in the peace talks not to take measures that would jeopardise the process which has reached a critical stage".

He stressed that Kenya would remain a neutral facilitator for both the Somali and the Sudan peace talks. 

He also "reaffirmed the Kenyan government's willingness to be part of any peacekeeping force to be deployed in Somalia", the statement said.

Meanwhile, the minister denied press reports that Kenya would try to mediate in the strained relations between Somalia and Ethiopia.

In a separate statement, he said "Kenya has never at any time been asked to mediate between the two neighbouring countries".

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