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US Says el-Qaida Elements Running Somali Islamic Movement
ISSUE 256
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Somaliland Government Condemns UN Security Council Resolution

US Says el-Qaida Elements Running Somali Islamic Movement

Hargeysa Judicial Court Acquits ‘Hassan Dahir Aweys’ of Terrorism

''Somalia Remains in Political Stasis Despite Mounting Tensions''

Somalia’s Islamists and Ethiopia Gird for a War

Floods Destroy Villages East Of Berbera

Islamists vow not to strike govt

Somalia: Forbidden Love

Interview With Meles Zenawi

Regional Affairs

MPs back UPDF deployment

Ghana: Plane Cited in Arms Trafficking Scandal

Editorial
Special Report

International News

U.S. condemns Somali Islamists' war ultimatum

With Annan, Africa loses its first UN chief

UK government
'driving Muslims to extremism'

When Democracy Fails

U.S. Executives Tour The Horn Of Africa, Learn Of The Terrorist Threats Ahead

Somalia's ragtag Islamists are here to stay

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Not Being Had By Al-Itihaad

The Next Horror In Somalia

Somalia: Somalis Must Have the Last Word On Who Leads Them

It's Still About Oil In Iraq

Africa: Power Of Music In Africa

Islamic Caliphate A Dream, Not Reality

Food for thought

Opinions

Islamism As A Political Tool In Somalia

Somalilanders Point Of View In The Debate

President Rayale’s Policy Against Influence Of Islamic Courts

Foreign Intervention Will Unify Somalis And Widen The Conflict

Congratulations To The Vice-President Of Somaliland And The Group Of Ministers Sent To Buroa

African’s New Proxy War-Which Side Is Somaliland On?

The Challenges Facing Somaliland Livestock Traders

How to Perform the Rituals of Hajj and Umrah

How to Perform the Rituals of Hajj and Umrah


Jendayi Frazer (file)
Jendayi Frazer (file)

In a bleak assessment of the Somali situation, Assistant Secretary Frazer says radicals including al-Qaida figures have taken control of the Islamic Courts movement, and that it may be too late for a plan approved by the U.N. Security Council earlier this month to stabilize the situation.

On December 6, the Security Council approved a resolution granting an exemption to the U.N. arms embargo on Somalia to allow an East African military mission to enter the country and shore up the country's Transitional Federal Government (TFG) based in Baidoa which is under siege from the Islamic Courts.

Uganda has agreed to take part in what is termed a protection and training mission by the regional Intergovernmental Authority on Development, IGAD, but the process of assembling the force has been slow.

In a talk with reporters, Assistant Secretary Frazer said the United States has lent diplomatic support to the effort, but that it may be too late to achieve the objective of Resolution 1725 - to bolster the transitional government in order to prompt the Union of Islamic Courts to return to talks on the country's future:

"It could possibly be too late," said Jendayi Frazer. "And I think we need to be very clear that the Africans believe they asked for this two and a half years ago. When the TFG first went back to Somalia from Nairobi, they asked for this exemption. And so there are some African countries that will definitely state that we waited too late."

Frazer said the United States has had contacts with the more moderate elements of the Islamic movement, which seized the Somali capital of Mogadishu in June and has steadily broadened the territory under its control.

However she said radicals have been ascendant in the movement in recent months and that local members of the al-Qaida terrorist organization are now in charge and fueling its aggressive military posture.

"The Council of Islamic Courts is now controlled by al-Qaida cell individuals, east Africa al-Qaida cell individuals," she said. "The top layer of the courts are extremist to the core. They are terrorists and they are in control. They are creating this logic of war, and that's a problem."

The United States believes that al-Qaida members who were behind the 1998 truck bomb attacks on the U.S. embassies in Nairobi and Dar es-Salaam are in Somalia.

Frazer said apprehending them remains a major priority of U.S. policy, though she said there were no plans for the use of American military force in Somalia to capture them or dislodge the al-Qaeda figures among the Islamic Courts leadership.

Under questioning, Frazer said the United States does not support intervention in Somalia by either neighboring Ethiopia, which has been aiding the transitional government, or Eritrea which has backed the Islamic Courts, and said U.N. Resolution 1725 is expressly designed to prevent it.

She said in addition to getting aid from Eritrea, the Islamic Courts movement has gotten millions of dollars in financial support from sources in Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Yemen and that the United States has raised the matter with those governments.

Source: VOA News

 


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