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TFG Military Movements Increase As Talks Near

ISSUE 234
Front Page
Index

This Week's Somaliland News

This Week's News coverage for Somaliland and Somalia

Headlines

Islamic Courts Delegation Flies To Khartoum From Mogadishu ’s Airport‎‎

Global Assessments Of The Somaliland ‎Foreign Policy  

The TFG To Ally With Warlords Against ‎Islamists‎‎ ‎‎‎‎

Horn of Africa Expert Sees U.S. Policy on ‎Track in Somalia‎‎‎ ‎‎‎

Somalia PM Snubs Islamist Talks: Dealing With ‎Sheikh Aweys Means Dealing With Bin Laden‎

Weak Somali Gov't to Boycott Peace Talks‎‎‎‎‎

Warlord President Says Islamists Will Not Rule Country

Death For Muslims Who Fail To Pray‎‎‎‎‎

Regional Affairs

U.S. Cites African Support for Policy on Somalia‎‎‎‎‎ ‎

Kenya/Uganda Vouch Somalia Peace‎‎

New, Besieged Transitional Government In Somalia Must Be Fortified: Annan‎‎

Migrants Risk Sharks, Bullets On Boats From Somalia

Germany Moves South

AU May Yet Become Another Talking Shop

Islamists Close In On Somalian ‎Government

Editorial
Special Report

International News

Secretary General’s Special Representative For ‎Somalia Briefs UN Security Council On The Rise ‎Of ‘Hardliners’ And Other Security Concerns‎‎

Dangerous Fiction in Somalia: A Tale of Two Cities, Part I

Analysis: Islamic renewal and the war on terror
An integrated strategy against religious extremism‎‎‎‎‎‎

The Somali Blogosphere

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

SOMALIA: U.S. GOVERNMENT POLICY ‎AND CHALLENGES

Somalia: Expanding Crisis In The Horn Of Africa

“More Than Counter-Terrorism: Rethinking U.S. Policy Toward Somalia”

UCID Briefing Paper To EU Mission Visiting Somaliland

Military Medal Reveals A Story

Somalia Could Be The Next Afghanistan

Food for thought

Opinions

Book Review On Part 2: ‎
The Bedrock Of The ‎
Family By Mohammed Bashe H. Hassan

Tribal Jihad‎‎‎‎‎‎

Why South Africans Should Greet Refugees With Open Arms‎‎‎‎‎

Open Letter To Somaliland Parliamentarians‎‎‎‎‎

The Governments That Never Tell The Truth‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎

“Mr. President, Why Do You Want To Turn Our Back On 26 th June? “‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎ ‎‎‎


Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, July 4, 2006 – Members of a group listed by the United States as a terrorist band are now running the capital of neighboring Somalia, days after Islamic fighters wrested control of the city from warlords, Ethiopia's Prime Minister Meles Zenawi said on Tuesday.

"The renowned extremist and terrorist organization, al-Ittihad, is at the helm of the current leadership in Mogadishu," Meles told lawmakers during a review of the situation in Ethiopian relations with neighboring countries.

"We do not believe that all the forces that have taken control of Mogadishu and its surroundings are extremists."

Al-Ittihad is listed by the US as a terrorist group linked to al-Qaeda. Washington has accused the group of harboring al-Qaeda leaders responsible for deadly 1998 bombings at the US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.

United Nations officials say al-Ittihad operates openly as a religious organization and is a powerful economic force in southern Somalia, where it captured key towns from warlords in June.

UN experts monitoring an arms embargo on lawless Somalia described Sheikh Hassan Dahir Aweys -- head of the powerful consultative council of the group that controls Mogadishu -- as the al-Ittihad leader responsible for overseeing military training.

The military trainers for what constitutes "al-Ittihad's de facto army" reportedly include several Afghans and Yemenis, UN experts said in a report released early last year.

Aweys, however, has denied being al-Ittihad's leader and said the group has disbanded.

Despite the dramatic rise to power of the extremists, most residents and members of the group running Mogadishu are only interested in ending 15 years of anarchy and restoring peace and stability in the country, Meles said.

Still, Ethiopia is closely watching developments in Somalia and has deployed troops and military hardware on the border separating the two countries.

Ethiopian officials have previously accused al-Ittihad combatants of training, arming and helping Ethiopia's ethnic Somali and Oromo separatist fighters.

"Our beef is with al-Ittihad ... It so happens that at the moment the new leadership of the union of the courts is dominated by this particular group," Meles told journalists last week. "Now, the threat posed to Ethiopia by the dominance of the Islamic courts, by al-Ittihad is obvious.

"With regard to the implications of the resurgence of terrorist groups within Somalia on the security and stability of Ethiopia, naturally -- like any country -- we reserve the right to defend ourselves against all attempts to destabilize our security and stability," Meles said.

The hard-line Aweys replaced the more moderate Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed, who charged on Sunday that Ethiopians had been illegally entering Somalia since June.

Abdulrahim Issa Adow, secretary to Aweys, said the group has put its fighters on alert but they have not sent combatants to attack Ethiopian troops, who are believed to be in areas outside the militia's control.

The Ethiopian government has supported the Somali Islamists' rivals with guns and money to keep them from taking power.

Somalia has been without an effective central government since the warlords turned on each other, carving much of the country into armed camps ruled by violence and clan law.

Source: Sapa-AP


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