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Somali Leaders Not Happy About State's Action

ISSUE 243
Front Page
Index
Headlines

Puntland’s Warlord
Insists On Going To Buhoodle

A Well Known Extremist Says Somaliland Should Join Islamic Courts

Awards & Celebrations At The Second Somaliland Convention

Somali Islamists Sending Envoys Abroad To Boost Image

Pakistani Militants Head For Somalia

U.S. Counterterrorism Work Stumbles In Somalia

Muslim World Protests At Pope's 'Derogatory' Mohamed Comments

Passport Scandal Exposes New Zealand Immigration

Regional Affairs

Convert From Islam To Christianity Killed

Western Agencies Waste Money In Somalia - Islamists

Deadly Smuggling Of Refugees From Somalia To Yemen Picks Up Pace, UN Agency Says

African Union Endorses Regional Peace Plan In Somalia

Editorial
Special Report

International News

US Accused Of Covert Operations In Somalia

Pope's Comments On Islam Spark Anger

The Republic Of Montenegro Joins WHO

'It's Very Powerful'

Where's The Terror?
Post-9/11 Prosecutions End With A Whimper

What The Democrats Don't Understand About The War On Terror

New Home For US Maasai Cattle

AFRICA INSIGHT: Draining The Swamps Of 'Homegrown Terrorism'

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Building Interdependence: Ethiopia And Somaliland

Somaliland's Plight

Pressing Ahead With A Controversial Peace Keeping Mission

The Horn Of Africa: The Path To Ruin

Thinkpiece
Stupid? Or Democratically Ignorant?

It Takes The Courage Of A Biblical David To Travel And Live In This Horn Of Africa Nation

Food for thought

Opinions

GAAHD-HAYE
Down Into The Deep Blue Sea

Disillusioned With The State Of Affairs In Somaliland?

Was Worth Going Another SORPI Conference

The Equation Of Mr. Arab Moi Will Not Be Compatible With Somaliland’s Inspirations

It Is No Easy Task Solving The Somalia Question

Abdiqasim And Ali Mahdi: One Is With The Courts’ Delegation, The Other Is A Target

Somalia: International Religious Freedom Report 2006

The Theory of Backwardness and Somalia/Somaliland Political Stage


By Hannah Roberts

Cape Town, SA, Sept 14, 2006 – Somali leaders have slammed the government's slow actions in denouncing the recent attacks on Somali shopkeepers and communities as an attempt to "save image" abroad in the run-up to the 2010 World Cup.

The government had been in denial about the targeting of Somalis in the city, said members of a newly formed Cape Town-wide Somali committee at a meeting on Wednesday with senior DA figures Tony Leon and Helen Zille.

At least 10 Somalis have been murdered in Cape Town since the beginning of August.

"The government must accept responsibility and stop trying to save face" said spokesperson Abdifatah Ismail.

"What has happened, happened - and unless we all recognize the problem there will be no solutions."

DA leader Tony Leon condemned the recent series of attacks on Somalis in which 10 people have been confirmed dead as "ethnic cleansing".

Some members of the Somali community say the number could be as high as 31.

Leon said he was "shocked and disturbed at the way people appear to have been targeted in the most extreme forms of criminality and murder".

"The Western Cape slogan of 'A Home for All' must be applied" he said, pledging the support of the DA in the struggle against xenophobic attacks and murders.

The DA's support for the Somali community was "complementary rather than contradictory" to the party's policy on tighter immigration controls, he said.

The City of Cape Town was focusing on getting the UN Commission for Refugees to open an office in Cape Town, Zille said.

The mayor praised the Somalis for their entrepreneurship in going into business in townships where investment was badly needed.

The city council had been working closely with the province to improve safety for all its citizens, Zille said.

However, the council had been excluded from important action planning meetings at the police level.

"We have been present at some meetings, but not at the critical top level," she said.

Source: Cape Times


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