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Islamists Ban Smoking In Southern Somalia

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


MOGADISHU , November 10, 2006 – Somalis caught smoking or selling cigarettes risk punishment in the south-central town of Jilib, residents said on Friday of the latest strict application of sharia law by Islamists who control much of the region.

Speaking at a public rally in Jilib, 365 km (227 miles) south of the capital Mogadishu, senior Islamist official Sheikh Mohamed Hassan issued the decree, which also banned the sale and use of leafy stimulant khat chewed by Somali men.

"From today onwards if a person is seen smoking, selling cigarettes, chewing khat or selling it he or she will be punished," he told the crowd amid chants of God is great.

"You will either be fined or arrested. We will start implementing sharia law."

The rise of the Islamists, who seized the capital Mogadishu in June, directly threatens the shaky interim government -- the 14th attempt to restore central rule in Somalia since the 1991 ouster of a dictator plunged the country into anarchy.

Many Somalis credit the Islamists for bringing a semblance of order to anarchic Mogadishu and other areas in southern Somalia under their control.

But some accuse them of imposing strict Islamic law, such as outlawing music in weddings or whipping men with long hair, on those who hold more moderate religious views.

Jilib resident Osman Mohamed said Islamist officials in the agriculture-rich settlement of about 5,000 people were already implementing the law even before the sheikh's order.

"I saw Islamic troops burning cigarettes in the streets this week," Mohamed told Reuters by telephone. "This announcement will affect so many families because they are so many women who feed their children from khat proceeds."

One man who said he has smoked heavily for 25 years said the Islamists were infringing on his rights and should not just slap the new rule into place without giving him time to quit.

"I have been smoking for last 25 years," the smoker told Reuters by telephone. "I am now hiding in the bush to smoke. We know it is for our own good to quit smoking but we need more time. I now have to quit smoking slowly."

A khat vendor in Jilib, who also declined to be named, said she was unhappy with the ban because she supports her five children on her sales proceeds.

"We did not choose to sell khat for fun. They should provide us with paying jobs and then punish us if we start selling it again." she said. "This means my family will go hungry."

Source: Reuters

 


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