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U.S. Has Direct Contacts With Somali Islamists

ISSUE 244
Front Page
Index
Headlines

President Rayale Said To Be Behind A Criminal Action Brought Against Haatuf Newspaper

Islamic militia seizes control of Somalia seaport

Abdillahi Yusuf Can't Rule Somalia

Foreign Aid

Financing Somalia's Islamist Warlords

Red Cross Suspends Activities Over Ethiopia Kidnap

7 Somalia President’s Guards Flown To Nairobi

Regional Affairs

Migrants Beaten To Death On Ships To Yemen - U.N.

Somali Militants 'Will Open Holy War Camps'

Islamists Ban Trade Of Khat During Ramadan

Editorial
Special Report

International News

U.S. Has Direct Contacts With Somali Islamists

Pope Sorry His Speech Offended Muslimsr

Somali Refugees Fear New Deadly Violence In Cape Town

Bristol: OFFICERS AT AIRPORT ARE TARGETING US, SAY SOMALIS

Al-Jazeera Int'l Vows 'Unparalleled' News From Africa

Who Says Immigrants Make No Contribution?

The Next Phase of the Middle East War

Somalia Denies CIA Presence In Bombing Probe

Somalia Denies CIA Presence In Bombing Probe

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Somaliland: Time for Corrections & Police Services rather than Forces

Oil Is The Basis Of The Crisis In Darfur

In Somalia, A Boot Camp For Islam

Business And Islam: Allies Against Anarchy In Somalia

''Somalia Drifts Toward Fragmentation As Regional Powers Polarize''

Investors Bet On Rising Costs For Scarce Water

Food for thought

Opinions

Why No Action In Darfur? Race

A Note Of Congratulation To SOPRI For A Successful Somaliland Convention 2006

Our cream

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

It Is No Easy Task Solving The Somalia Question

Somalia: International Religious Freedom Report 2006

The Theory of Backwardness and Somalia/Somaliland Political Stage


Somali protesters shout slogans against the Inter-Governmental Authority on Development (IGAD) as they hold posters and Arabic books during a demonstration after Friday prayers in Somalia's capital Mogadishu 22/09/06.

NEW YORK , Sept 22, 2006 – The United States held a direct meeting in recent weeks with a key Islamist leader from Somalia and demanded the handover of "terrorists" believed to be in Mogadishu, a senior U.S. official said on Friday.

Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs, Jendayi Frazer, said the U.S. ambassador in Kenya met this month with senior Islamist Sheikh Sharif Ahmed while in the Sudanese capital of Khartoum.

"It was just normal diplomacy, we opened a channel to talk to them about the fact that we know that there are terrorists residing in Mogadishu and they needed to turn them over," Frazer told Reuters in an interview.

"The response was 'we don't know of any terrorists," she added.

The United States does not have an embassy in the war-torn African country and monitors developments there from its embassy in Kenya.

Frazer did not have the exact day of the meeting with Sheikh Sharif Ahmed, whom she said represented the more moderate face of the Islamists who seized power in Mogadishu last June,

The United States believes Somalia has become a safe haven for terrorist groups and Frazer said Washington thinks at least three of the plotters behind the 1998 U.S. Embassy bombings in Tanzania and Kenya are there.

Washington has been debating whether to deal directly with the Islamists instead of supporting the weak transitional government in Baidoa.

Frazer said Washington was still trying to establish who controlled the Islamists.

The United States has said it would not deal with cleric Sheikh Hassan Dahir Aweys, who is on a U.N. list of al Qaeda associates and heads the Council of the Islamic Courts.

Developing out of Sharia courts that sprang up in lawless Mogadishu in the mid-1990s, the Islamist movement developed into a strong political and military force before taking over Mogadishu and a southern swathe of the country in June.

While Somalis have welcomed more security in areas seized by the Islamists, many are concerned by signs of fundamentalist practices such as enforcing dress codes.

The Islamists have written several letters to the United States and the United Nations and recently sent several envoys around the world to try to allay fears that the Sharia law they envisage would result in a Taliban-style rule.

Frazer said the Islamists had been asking the United States for a while for direct discussions and the Khartoum meeting provided this opportunity.

Source: Reuters/SHABELE MEDIA

 

 


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