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Somalia: Islamists Refuse Talks, Acknowledge Eritrea

ISSUE 236
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6 Suspects Arrested In Connection With Deerow’s Murder Include 2 Somalilanders‎‎

Millions Of Dollars In Aid Money Pocketed By Top TFG Officials

UK MPs McCarthy And Michael Speak On Somalia And Somaliland‎‎

Deeraw Shot Dead Outside Mosque‎‎‎

‎‎ Ethiopia Says Eritrea "Actively Supports" Al Qaeda

Questions Raised Over Contents Of Newly Arrived Cargo Plane In Somali Capital‎‎‎‎‎

New System To Reduce Price Of Phone Calls In Africa

Man, 33, Marries Woman, 104

Regional Affairs

Riots Break Out In Somali Town Of Baidoa After Cabinet Minister Fatally Shot‎‎‎‎‎ ‎‎‎‎‎‎

Trident Racing Forms New Partnership Deal‎‎

Ethiopia Says Troops Will Respond If Threatened

Call for Lifting of Ban On Horn Livestock

Yemen, France And Djibouti To Secure Horn Of Africa

Somalia War Threatens To Go Regional

Al-Zawahri Calls On Muslims Everywhere To Rise Up In Holy War Against Israel, U.S.‎‎

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UK Wants Somalia Islamist Leader Kept Out Of Power‎‎

UK Hospitals Can Benefit From Partnerships With Developing World Hospitals ‎‎

Farah's Recipe For Rapid Rankings Rise‎‎‎‎‎

Muslim Body Protests 'Invasion' Of Somalia

Talks In Khartoum Must Continue‎‎

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

What Somalia Wants

A New Regional Conflict Brews In The Horn Of Africa

Tough Talk From Somalia 's Islamic Hard-Liner

Mujahideen-Turned-Governor Pursues Modernization

Mogadishu's Ports to Provide Significant Funding for Somalia's Islamists

Food for thought

Opinions

What Can Be Dreamed, Can’t Be Lost

Rebuttal to Abdi Samatar's Criticism of Latest ICG Report on Somaliland‎‎‎‎‎‎

Does The BBC Somali Service Uphold “Impartiality And Diversity Of Opinion”?‎‎‎‎‎

Why Strong Domestic Policy Should Be Our Foreign Policy.‎‎‎‎‎

Ikran Warsame-The Maverick Politician Already Left An Indelible Mark On The Community‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎


Mogadishu, Somalia, July 25, 2006 – Somalia's Islamists said on Tuesday they would not attend peace talks with the interim government until Ethiopian troops left their soil, and for the first time acknowledged Eritrean backing for their cause.

"As long as Ethiopia is in our country, talks with the government cannot go ahead," the Islamists' main leader, Sheikh Hassan Dahir Aweys, told foreign correspondents in Mogadishu.

Ethiopia has sent several thousands troops into Somalia, according to witnesses and regional experts, to counter expansion by the Islamists, who took Mogadishu last month, and protect the fragile interim government.

"If the government cares about the Somalis, it should remove our enemy from the country ... Ethiopia has invaded us."

Aweys, a hardliner who is on United States and United Nations lists of people linked to terrorism, was speaking before the UN special envoy to Somalia, Francois Lonseny Fall, met Islamist leaders in Mogadishu to try and promote the talks in Sudan.

But the same position was ratified by another Islamist leader, Sheikh Sharif Ahmed, when he came out of the meeting.

"One of the agreements we reached with the government was that no foreign troops should be brought to Somalia, and if they come in then the talks cannot go ahead," he said.

The government of President Abdillahi Yusuf is based in a provincial town, Baidoa, where witnesses say Ethiopian soldiers are guarding key buildings. Addis Ababa backs Yusuf but regards the Islamists as led by "terrorists".

In a rare public acknowledgement of Eritrean support for the Islamists -- which the UN and regional analysts have confirmed -- Islamist leader Aweys said Asmara was providing support in gratitude for past help.

"The previous Somali government [of President Mohamed Siyad Barre] helped Eritrea during its struggle for independence from Ethiopia," he said. " Eritrea helps the Somali people, they are returning back the favor."

The UN has said Eritrea has funneled arms and weapons to the Islamists, while analysts believe Eritrean military advisers are in Mogadishu.

Aweys denied the Islamists planned to expand to Baidoa. "There has never been an intention of attacking Baidoa," he said.

Source: Reuters


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