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Somalia Needs To Be Stabilized - US

ISSUE 254
Front Page
Index
Headlines

Buroa Police Arrest Prominent Clan Leader

SNM Veteran Commander Hassan Yonis Habane Dies

US Seeks UN Backing For Somalia Peacekeeping Force

World AIDS Day Celebrated In Somaliland

Erigavo’s Students Trained In Leadership

New chapter in UN-Somaliland cooperation

Floods In East Africa Said To Kill 250

Somalia On Edge After Baidoa Suicide Attack

Regional Affairs

Somaliland Administration And UNDP Agree New 2007 Partnership

Uganda : Journalists Call for Respect of Media Freedom

Editorial
Special Report

International News

US Defends Somalia Peacekeeping Plan

Religious fanaticism not the main cause of political violence and terrorism

INTERNATIONAL CRISIS GROUP: Somalia Conflict Risk Alert

Somalia Needs To Be Stabilized - US

Iran turns up the Heat

Citing Spike In Somalia’s Arms Trade, Security Council Extends Group Tracking Flows

Al-Jazeera and the Truth

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

U.S. Foreign Policy Toward Somaliland Within The Context Of The Bush Administration’s War On Terrorism

Somalia: Getting It Wrong In Somalia, Again

Sending African Troops Into Somalia 'Would Trigger War'

Islamists Claim Clash With Ethiopian Troops

Iman Promotes Online Auction To Help Fight AIDS

Eritrea : The Somali Problem Should Be Left for Somalis to Tackle!

Conflicts And Peace Building in Africa

Food for thought

Opinions

More Warning Signs Of Islamic Courts Influence In Somaliland & Desperate Need For Somaliland Response And Message

Media, The Hand That Rules Somaliland

The Imminence Of A Proxy War In Somalia And Its Ramifications – From A Somalilander’s Viewpoint

Islamism Rode Democracy's Wave

The Miracles At Hargeysa And Mogadishu. What Lessons Can Be Learned And What Is The Path To The Future?

Ethiopia And Kenya In Peril: Good US Strategy?


Washington DC, November 29, 2006 – The United States said on Tuesday a regional peacekeeping force was needed to protect Somalia's weak transitional government from the powerful Islamist movement controlling the capital.

One day before the UN Security Council was expected to debate the proposed peacekeepers, the US State Department said the force was needed to help restore dialogue between the interim government, the Transitional Federal Institutions (TFIs), and the Islamic movement, the Union of Islamic Courts (UIC).

"This force will deter further aggression against the TFIs; create the required space for dialogue; and stabilize the situation," said a statement from the State Department spokesman's office.

"The sole purpose of this deployment would be to stabilize the security situation by providing protection and training for the TFIs, not to engage in offensive actions against the UIC," it said.

The department also said the two sides should be ready, as part of a longer-term solution, to reach a "security protocol, including a verifiable ceasefire and plans for military disengagement, once dialogue resumes."

The US statement came amid rising tensions in Somalia as Islamists warned they would invite foreign fighters to join their war if the United Nations authorizes peacekeepers.

But the embattled Somali government said failure by the United Nations to adopt the resolution could lead to a "doomsday scenario" leading to all-out war.

The State Department said Washington would work to prevent the war from escalating into a broader conflict in the Horn of Africa.

"The United States will remain actively engaged in preventing the continued escalation of tensions inside Somalia, which could spark wider regional conflict in the Horn of Africa if left unchecked. The deployment of a regional force is key in ensuring that such a scenario does not transpire," it said.

According to diplomats, Washington intends to introduce a resolution at the Security Council on Wednesday that would ease an arms embargo to allow plans for a regional east African peacekeeping force to deploy to Somalia.

The proposed 8000-strong peacekeeping mission would be manned by troops from the east African regional Inter-Governmental Authority on Development (IGAD).

Somalia has been without a functioning central authority since 1991 and the two-year-old transitional government is the latest in more than a dozen international efforts to restore stability.

The Islamists seized Mogadishu in June after months of fighting and then grabbed most of southern and central Somalia where they have imposed strict Sharia law.

Source: AFP

 

 


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