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EU Offers Regional Body Sh344m

ISSUE 218
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This Week's Somaliland News

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Somaliland Warns Puntland Either To Withdraw ‎Militia Forces Or Face Immediate Consequences‎

Press Release By Somaliland Foreign Affairs

3 Sisters Suffer From An Unknown Disease‎‎‎‎‎‎ ‎‎‎‎‎

Ali Mazrui To Wind Up Visit To Somaliland Today‎

“It Is Only Fair That I Raise The Question Was ‎It My Gender, My Clan Or Was It The Political ‎Affiliation Of My Husband” Amina Weris‎‎

Circumstances, Today In Somaliland!‎

The First Football World Cup For ‎Nations That Do Not Exist

Regional Affairs

More From Baidoa

Ikran Haji Daud: A Symbol ‎Of Hope For Many Women‎

UNESCO Builds New Offices And Classes For ‎Amoud University‎

Around 90 Die In Somalia Militia Battles‎

U.S. Navy, Suspected Pirates Clash‎‎‎

Ethiopian Airlines To Begin Flight To South Sudan

KHAT’S NO WAY TO GO‎

IGAD Regrets Failure To Deploy ‎Peacekeeping Force In Somalia

Ethiopia Does Not Benefit From Camels: Official

Editorial
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International News

International Day For Elimination ‎Of Racial Discrimination

Feed Gunmen To Save Somalia, East Africa Urges‎‎‎‎‎‎‎

Somalia: Humanitarian Response Fund‎‎‎

EU Offers Regional Body Sh344m

Somaliland Politician Visits Minneapolis

Young Muslim Women Wear 'Aussie Hijab'‎‎

Somaliland Congress must be fair and ‎acknowledge their mistakes‎‎

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

After 3 Years, Somalis Struggle To Adjust To U.S.‎

Altering The Hijab To Rules Of The Game

Student Rock Around-The-Clock‎‎

NORDEM Report 03/2006‎

Case Study Report

The Ticking Bomb:‎ The Educational Underachievement of Somali Children in the British Schools

Opinions

Congratulations To Somaliland Parliament ‎For Silencing Budget Nay-Sayers

Somaliland Is Being Sold‎‎‎

A Word Of Encouragement And ‎Inspiration To My Beloved Somaliland‎

Stealing My Fish, Adding Insult To ‎Economic Injury‎‎‎

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By Somalilandtimes network

By John Oyuke

European Union Commissioner, Louis Michel (right), talks with Belgium Ambassador, Cristina Funes Noppen, during the IGAD summit on Monday. Pic by Jacob Otieno

Nairobi, March 21, 2006 – The European Union wants Inter Governmental Authority on Development (Igad) members to sign a treaty that would usher in stability, security and development in the Horn of Africa.

The EU also said it was willing to give Igad Sh344 million to deal with migration and refugees. European Commissioner for Development and Humanitarian Aid, Louis Michel, said such a regional pact would complement programmes to address cross-border issues.

He expressed hope that Igad leaders would kick-start such a process, which would be followed by dialogue on regional challenges common to Igad members. Michel identified such challenges as democratic governance, conflict, food security, resource sharing, security and religious fundamentalism.

"The basic objective is to break the cycle of conflict in the region," he said during the opening session of the Igad Heads of State summit in Nairobi. He said the pact should involve the African Union and the League of Arab States.

He said the EU would help implement the pact, along with other partners. He said the EU was ready to strengthen Igad for the purpose of ensuring peace, security and development in the region.

Call for dialogue

Meanwhile, President Kibaki assumed Igad and called for an end to the Ethiopia-Eritrea war. Kibaki, who took over from President Yoweri Museveni of Uganda, also called on Somalis to support the new government.

"We ask Ethiopia and Eritrea to adhere to the December 2000 Algiers peace agreement and the relevant United Nations Security resolutions. Kenya believes dialogue is the only effective way of easing tensions," said Kibaki.

Other presidents present were Sudan’s Omar Bashir, Menes Zenawi of Ethiopia and Djibouti’s Ismail Umar Guelleh. The President of Eritrea, Isaias Afewerki, sent Agriculture minister Arfeine Berre as his representative.

Kibaki urged Igad members to address challenges that hinder the organization’s progress. He said poor infrastructure and communication held back intra-regional trade.

He said famine was a setback to development in the region and called for regional co-operation. "Our region is prone to climatic extremes. Igad members are facing lengthy drought that has resulted in severe famine and heavy loss of livestock," he said.

The President was hopeful that the peace process in Sudan would hold.

"Kenya congratulates the people of Sudan for the implementation of the peace agreement. We are confident that this will have a positive impact towards other conflicts in that country," he said.

He urged Igad’s partners to support post-conflict reconstruction in Sudan and Somalia. He said piracy along the Somalia coast was cause for concern in the region and among international maritime organizations.

"I call upon Igad and the international community to join hands in fighting piracy," he said.

Post-conflict problems

Heads of State Menes Zenawi of Ethiopia (left), Yoweri Museveni (Uganda), Mwai Kibaki (Kenya), Omar Bashir (Sudan) and Djibouti’s Ismail Umar Guelleh, and Eritrea’s minister of Agriculture Arfaine Berre, stand for prayers before the opening of the 11th Igad Ordinary Summit.

And Ugandan‘s President Yoweri Museveni urged Igad members to assemble a force to protect the new Somalia government from militias.

The outgoing Igad chairman said Somalia was undergoing post-conflict problems, which could be solved by training an army, a police force, magistrates and a civil service.

"The post-conflict problems are easy to manage. You cannot have peace unless you have an army," said Museveni.

He said lack of co-operation among Igad members had turned small problems into big ones.

"Uganda and a few other countries are ready to send forces to Somalia to help (the government) to secure itself and start building a national army," he said.

Museveni said other countries had done the same in the past.

"In the case of Somalia, we were told that they were allergic to foreigners including us. That they preferred continued fratricide. I was not sure about the analysis," he said.

He called on Igad to help Somalia pay for the upkeep of militias in Baidoa. He said the transitional government had peacefully mobilized militias in Baidoa not to obstruct the location of the government there. He praised the co-operation between his country and Sudan, which, he said, had forced the Lord’s Resistance Army to relocate from Southern Sudan to the Democratic Republic of Congo.

"The co-operation between the Sudan, SPLM and Uganda on the issue of the terrorist group led by Joseph Kony is a good example," he said.

Museveni said remnants of LRA had fled to DRC’s Garamba National Park. He said United Nations forces controlled the area.

"We should use the same co-operation to decimate the group," he said.

He said Igad members needed to work as a team to resolve common problems such as famine and called on the group to establish intra-regional trade.

Source:Standard,

 


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