| The Somaliland Times | |||||||
| ISSUE 39 October 19, 2002 |
Eldored Peace Talks Will Not Fail, Says Mediator |
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FRONT
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Story Filed: Thursday, October 17,
2002 10:12 AM EST Eldoret, Oct 17, 2002 (UN Integrated Regional
Information Networks/All Africa Global Media via COMTEX) - The Kenyan
special envoy for Somalia, Elijah Mwangale, on Wednesday expressed
confidence that the current Somali peace talks would succeed, and could
make progress fast. He said this was because the international community
and the region were united in exerting pressure for success, and because
all the major players in the Somali conflict were present. Hundreds of Somali delegates have arrived for the
conference, which began on Tuesday in the Kenyan town of Eldoret. It is
being held under the auspices of the regional body, the Inter-Governmental
Authority on Development (IGAD). Mwangale heads the IGAD technical
committee, which is mediating in the talks. The membership of the
committee comprises representatives from the neighbouring states of Kenya,
Ethiopia and Djibouti. Addressing a press conference in Eldoret, Mwangale
said the number of people attending the conference was "way beyond
our expectation", and that the "key military stakeholders"
in Somalia were all present. "We have literally everybody," he
told reporters. "I can tell you that there is nobody who has not
arrived or is not arriving. In other words, this conference will be
completely different from the other conferences that we've had before on
Somalia." Mwangale said the mediation team believed that
progress could now be rapid. "We believe that we have reached a stage
that rather than going for three months, as we had planned in our process,
that it will now take about a month for us to reach the question of
constitutional structures and the governing structures that are required
for Somalia. And I think that from the expressions that we had this
morning [from delegates], they want to have a structure that is able to
hold the whole of Somalia, and I think we are going to end up having a
decentralised kind of unitary government." Asked how this stage would be reached, Mwangale
replied that the conference should be able to set up committees "in
the next two weeks" to make recommendations on the key issues
identified by the conference. "Now those committees are the key
ones," he continued, "because they will address the key issues
that will have been identified in this conference, issues such as the
cessation of hostilities, demobilisation, the new constitutional
structures, resumption of aid." Mwangale told reporters that there would be "six to seven items" on the agenda, and that the committees would each have between 12 and 16 members. That meant, he said, that the number of delegates in the second phase of the negotiations would be reduced to between 75 and 100. "From now on the process will be continuous," said Mwangale, "but we'll cut down the numbers [of delegates]. As it is, we're overwhelmed by the numbers." The conference organisers originally invited some 300 participants, but say they now have at least 450. "We have got too many delegates," Mwangale said. "Everybody who has come as head of a delegation has come with more than the number allocated. So it means that we have now got to sit down with the leadership and cut down that number."
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