Home | Contact us | Links | Archives

Analyst Says Negatives Outweigh Positives In UN Somalia Resolution
ISSUE 255
Front Page
Index
Headlines

Security Council Approves African Protection Force To Be Deployed In TFG Stronghold

Somaliland Government And World Bank Agree To Co-operate

Hargeysa Judicial Court Acquits ‘Hassan Dahir Aweys’ of Terrorism

'Heavy Fighting' In Somali Town

Islamic Courts snubs UN resolution

Hargeysa police arrest Abdillahi Makawi

UCID Warns Rayale’s Government To ‘Wakeup’

SOPRI’s 'Goodwill Mission To Somaliland' Delegation Arrives Today In Hargeysa

Regional Affairs

Uganda Ready To Send Peacekeepers To Somalia

Somalia Official Issues Beheading Threat

Editorial
Special Report

International News

Feingold, Coleman Fault Bush Policy On Somalia

Democracy Promotion: The European Way

Jendayi Frazer Is Making Mistakes And Enemies For The U.S.

Rapist Asylum Seeker Due Damages

U.N. Security Council OKs Somalia Forces

Analyst Says Negatives Outweigh Positives In UN Somalia Resolution

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Somalia: The Ethiopia Factor in the Rise of the Union of Islamic Courts

The Time Is Now For A U.S. Africa Command

Africa Insight: Storm Clouds Over Somalia As Rivals Prepare For Battle

Security Council Approves African Protection, Training Mission In Somalia

Seattle Islamic Quiz

Somaliland Fact Sheet - Dec 2006

Food for thought

Opinions

Support Democracy & Reject Political Form Of Islamic Sharia Law In Somaliland

Fallout From The UN-Approved Peace Keeping In Somalia

THE DYNAMICS OF THE FLUX

Somaliland And Islamic Courts

The Anti-Somaliland Conference In Virginia: A Spent Force Running After A Mirage

The Stupidity Of Our Voting Public Never Ceases To Astound Me

Somaliland By Ahmed Aw Gedi

How to Perform the Rituals of Hajj and Umrah


By Joe De Capua

Washington, December 07, 2006 – Professor David Shinn of George Washington University in Washington says the new UN resolution endorsing a peacekeeping force on Somalia has positives and negatives. But he says negatives outweigh the positives.

“It’s a very carefully written resolution. It tries to strictly limit the force that would be sent into Somalia to do two things -- to protect the transitional federal government at its headquarters in Baidoa and to train transitional federal government (TFG) security forces. The most positive aspect of it is the goal seems to be to bring the Islamic Courts ( Union) to the negotiating table,” he says.

On the negative side, Shinn says, “It’s not clear who will comprise this force, other than the fact that it will not be neighboring countries – Ethiopia, Kenya or Djibouti. As far as I know, the only country that’s volunteered for it so far is Uganda. It’s also not clear whether the force will be able to confine actions to the protection of the TFG in Baidoa and the training function. And the creation of the force, if it happens and I have some question about that, may be a disincentive for the transitional federal government to negotiate seriously. And then finally, it doesn’t really deal with the issue of the existing foreign forces that are now in Somalia. That is, those from Ethiopia, Eritrea and jihadists from the Middle East and South Asia, except to say that it will create conditions for them to leave.”

The G.W. University professor adds, “On balance, I think the resolution does more harm than good. There’s a lot of nice rhetoric in the resolution, but I’m not sure it matches the reality on the ground. Although I do support the basic concept of what it’s trying to do. And that is to get both parties back to the negotiating table.”

He says that one of the problems is what’s left of the divided TFG and whether it has any real security forces to train. Shinn does say that the United States and other nations have legitimate concerns about some elements of the Islamic Courts Union having contacts with Al Qaida.

Source: VOA News


Home | Contact us | Links | Archives