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Kenyan Muslims Criticize US 'Lies' About Attacks

ISSUE 251
Front Page
Index
Headlines

Two Female Employees Sacked Over Islamic Dress

UK Parliamentarians Put Focus On Somaliland

Analysis: International Experts Call For Recognizing Somaliland

Somalia’s Islamists and government delegation reach agreements

New Name And New Office For Child Right Organisation

Eleven Nations Feed Somali War Build-Up - Experts

The California Wellness Foundation Announces 2006 California Peace Prize Honorees

Regional Affairs

Islamists Ban Smoking In Southern Somalia

ICRA – A New School For Orphaned And Underprivileged Girls

Kenya Wants UN To Lift Arms Ban On Somalia

Editorial
Special Report

International News

Muslim Wins Congress Seat

Somali Vote May See First Muslim In Congress

Kenyan Muslims Criticize US 'Lies' About Attacks

Poor Nations Ranked As Some Of Most Corrupt

Man Acquitted In Fake Somali Currency Case

Police Issue Two Warrants For London, Ont., Man Sought In Shooting

The Dollar's Full-System Meltdown

Nairobi Shrugs Off Terrorism Fears

VOA English Service Ambassador Cohen Talks About U.S.- Africa Relations

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

A U.S. Security Agenda In Africa – Part I

Rwandese Business Leaders are keen to invest in Somaliland

Desire For Electronic Entertainment In Africa

Why Do So Few People Vote in the U.S.?

Africa: France Increased Arms Sales And Intervention

US Plans To Scale Up Military Presence In The Horn Of Africa

Stars' Good Intentions Put Under Microscope

Somalia conflict to spread?

Food for thought

Opinions

Adopt Villages, Not Pet Children

The Illegal Incarceration Of Hawa Hussein Handule

Somaliland Must Defend Freedom, Civil Liberties, Democracy & Human Rights In The Horn Of Africa

There Will Be No Anschluss Of Somaliland Into A Greater Somalia Reich

Headscarf: A Choice For Women And A Signal For Modesty

The Threats Of The Islamists Should Not Sidetrack Somaliland


Nairobi , Kenya, November 05, 2006 – Kenyan Muslims on Saturday accused the United States of lying about plans by Somali Islamists to carry out suicide attacks in Kenya and Ethiopia, calling it part of a larger plot to attack Somalia.

The Supreme Council of Kenyan Muslims said Washington is using the alleged threats as a ploy to attack and destroy Somalia's powerful Islamist movement, which is now girding for war with the weak government.

"America wants to cause confusion as a pretext to give it reason to once again attack and destroy the Republic of Somalia," council chairperson Abdulghaful El Busaidy said.

"Kenyan Muslims strongly condemn ... the US [for] putting Somalia and the Union of Islamic Courts as another in its axis of evil," he told reporters at a Nairobi press conference.

Busaidy urged Kenya to continue efforts to mediate between the Islamists and the Somali government.

On Thursday, the US embassies in Nairobi and Addis Ababa warned of threats from extremists in Somalia for "the execution of suicide explosions in prominent landmarks within Kenya and Ethiopia" and urged extreme caution.

US officials said the Islamists' supreme leader, Sheikh Hassan Dahir Aweys, purportedly authorized attacks in internet postings as peace talks with the government collapsed this week.

Negotiations failed after the Islamists demanded that Ethiopia withdraw thousands of troops they say have been deployed to protect the government, and the removal as co-mediator of Kenya, which they say backs Ethiopia.

Aweys, a hard-line cleric designated a "terrorist" by the US for alleged al-Qaeda ties, has not personally reacted to the allegations but other Islamist officials have rejected them as "baseless".

Aweys has in the past denied any connection to terrorism and denied US accusations the Islamists are harboring al-Qaeda suspects wanted for the deadly 1998 bombings of Washington's embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.

His movement has, however, declared jihad, or holy war, on the Ethiopian troops allegedly in Somalia and has expressed anger at Kenya and Ethiopia for supporting government calls to send peacekeepers.

Earlier this year, a covert US programme to fund Somali warlords battling the Islamists for control of Mogadishu failed disastrously when the capital fell in June after months of fierce fighting.

The widely criticized scheme has caused intense animosity toward the US among the Islamists, who have since seized most of southern and central Somalia and now threaten the government seat of Baidoa.

The unrest, which many fear could explode into a regional war, has direct implications for neighboring and mainly Christian Kenya and Ethiopia, which both have sizeable Muslim minorities.

Kenya has been flooded by tens of thousands of Somali refugees in recent months and Muslims here are concerned the US warning could spike what they complain is existing government harassment in the name of the war on terrorism.

Somalia has lacked an effective government since the 1991 ouster of dictator Mohamed Siyad Barre, and a national administration formed in Kenya two years ago has failed to exert its authority.

The last overt US foray in Somalia ended disastrously in 1995 after its elite rangers were sucked into interclan conflict, resulting to the death of 18 US special forces members.

Source: Sapa-AFP


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