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Ethiopian Information Minister Says Somaliland Future Lies Within A United Somalia
ISSUE 81
Front Page
Index

Headlines

- Puzzling Statement by Ethiopian Information Minister
- Ethiopian Information Minister Says Somaliland Future Lies Within A United Somalia
- NOVIB Ordered Out Of Somaliland

- 4 NGOs Blame Jamhuuriya For Misleading Report On Meeting With NOVIB

- EYEWITNESS, Somaliland Needs Strong Social Services

- Somaliland Leads Charge For African Women

- International Crisis Group Report On Somaliland Democratization And Its Discontents, Part II

Health

- Drug: The Double Edged Knife (Part 18)

- Countries need to move beyond legal tools to societal attitudes to combat female circumcision

International News

- Hyderabad's African Old Guard

- Six Killed In South Somalia

- Foreign-Born Children Who Have Moved To America Say Reality Doesn't Match Their Previous Perceptions

- Kenyan Women To Sue British Army For Alleged Rapes

- Suspected Terrorist Vanished From Home, Says Father

- Local Somalis Fear Kids Will Claim Abuse To Escape Tradition

Peace Talks

- Faction Leader Leaves Talks

Arts & Entertainment

 

Editorial & Opinions

- The Way Forward for Somaliland-Ethiopian Relations

- A Glance At Issues

- Somaliland’s Road To Self-Sufficiency

- Signing The Dotted Lines Could Be Costly

- Borama Water Agency, A Realistic Approach
- The Wisdom Somaliland Is Missing
- Somaliland's Government Repeats the Same Mistake


Ethiopian Information Minister Says Somaliland Future Lies Within A United Somalia

ADDIS ABABA, 8 Aug 2003 (IRIN) – Ethiopia has rejected calls by the breakaway republic of Somaliland for international recognition by insisting that the region’s future lies within a united Somalia.
Information Minister Bereket Simon told IRIN that while Somalis will decide their own future, Ethiopia’s interests lie in unifying the war-ravaged state.

His comments came as Dahir Riyale Kahin, president of the self-declared republic of Somaliland, held talks in Addis Ababa with Prime Minister Meles Zenawi and key Ethiopian officials.
The talks, according to Bereket, focused on two areas – latest developments in Somaliland and security issues surrounding the common border with Ethiopia. Members of the Somaliland delegation have not made any public announcements.

Bereket also dismissed claims that the five-day visit by the Somaliland delegation, which also includes the foreign minister Edna Adan Ismail, undermined the Somali peace talks currently underway in Kenya. The Somaliland authorities have refused to attend the conference, saying it has nothing to do with them.

Bereket said he remained optimistic about the Nairobi-based talks, as long as the rival factions stayed at the negotiating table.
"We think they will find a possible way out of the current situation through dialogue and continuous engagement – that is the only way out,” he said.

“We don’t see walk-outs from such meetings as solutions, nor resorting to armed intimidation,” he added. The president of Somalia's Transitional National Government (TNG) Abdiqassim Salad Hassan walked out of the talks last week saying they were heading towards the "dismemberment" of Somalia.

Bereket also dismissed claims that Ethiopia was “meddling” in the talks. “Ethiopia cannot serve as the scapegoat for the failures that he [Abdiqassim] has executed in that meeting.”

“If you are asking me about the wishes of Ethiopia, it is that we would like to see a united Somalia living peacefully, being led by a responsible state,” Bereket stated.

“That is our wish and we will try to the best of our capacity to assist our Somali brothers to achieve this objective – but that remains their task and depends on how they act."

“Whether this dream can come true or not is the work of the Somali brothers and sisters," he added.

"The best way forward is continuing the dialogue and reaching agreement based on the accommodation of the interests of different sectors of Somali people.”
 


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