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Islamic Leader in Somalia Surrenders
ISSUE 262
Front Page
Index
Headlines

Elders Accuse Rayale of Corrupting The Clan System

Somaliland’s Constitutional Rights Denied To Haatuf Journalists

Somaliland Launches New Diplomatic Offensive

The Transition To Peace And Stability?

Bleak outlook for AU force in Somalia

Detaining Journalists under “Insult” laws is an insult to the Somaliland Constitution

Somalia, Sudan in focus at African Union Summit

The whereabouts of Sheik Aweys unknown
Meles Zenawi

Ethiopian Troops Begin to Leave Somalia

Regional Affairs

Somali Poet Mohamed Hashi Dhama To Give Poetry Reading At University Of Washington

Gunmen Kill 5, Mortars Injure 4 In Restive Somali Capital

Editorial
Special Report

International News

Written Answers From UK Parliament

U.S. experts identified bodies in Somalia-Meles

Are There US Soldiers Missing in Somalia?

9/11 and American Empire: Intellectuals Speak Out, by David Ray Griffin and Peter Dale Scott

U.S. Department of Defense Denies Capture of U.S. Soldiers

U.S. Strikes Again in Somalia

Strife's monument: Mogadishu Down
City battles internal chaos

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Expelling the Infidel: Historical Look at Somali Resistance to Ethiopia

It's Not Too Late For Somalia

Coping with Humpty Dumpty'

Using Insult Laws is an Insult to the Somaliland Media and Public – the detention and trial of Haatuf Journalists

Clan Politics Dictate The Future Of Somalia

Oil Hopes Hinge on North Somalia

Food for thought

Opinions

Time To End The Family Feud In Somaliland

Somaliland: the last bastion of Somali liberty

The Gadabuursi Manifesto

A Tyrant Tossing with Terrorism in Today’s Eritrea

Why My Cousin Yusuf Abdi Gabobe Is In Jail?

President Rayale: A Leader Gone Missing On The Big Day

A Jewel From The Jewel

A road map to lasting peace and prosperity in Somalia

Rayaale Is Acting Against The National Campaigns Of Somaliland Independency


Ahmed, one of the top leaders of Somalia's Islamic movement has turned himself over to U.S. and Kenyan authorities and is under their protection in Nairobi, officials said Monday Jan. 22, 2007.

By CHRIS TOMLINSON

NAIROBI, Kenya, January 22, 2007 - A top leader of Somalia's ousted Islamic movement seen by the U.S. as a potential key to preventing a widespread insurgency there surrendered to authorities and is under protection in Nairobi, officials said Monday.

Sheik Sharif Sheik Ahmed, who has been described by a U.S. diplomat as a moderate who could play a role in reconciling Somali factions, crossed into Kenya, went to a police station along the border on Sunday and was flown to Nairobi, according to a police report seen by The Associated Press.

The U.S. said it was not involved in protecting Ahmed, who apparently feared for his life in Somalia, where the remnants of his Council of Islamic Courts are being hunted by Ethiopian troops and Somali government forces.

"The U.S. government is not holding or interrogating Sheik Sharif Sheik Ahmed and was not involved in his capture or surrender," a U.S. Embassy official said, speaking on condition of anonymity as they weren't authorized to talk to the media.

U.S. Ambassador Michael Ranneberger has repeatedly said Ahmed is a moderate Islamic leader who should be part of a national reconciliation process in Somalia.

Ahmed was the chairman of the Executive Council of Islamic Courts and shared the leadership with the Sheik Hassan Dahir Aweys, who was chairman of the court's legislative council. While Ahmed is considered a moderate, Aweys is on a U.S. list of people with suspected ties to the al-Qaida terror network, though he has repeatedly denied having links to international terrorists.

If Ahmed agrees to hold talks with Somalia's government, it could be a major step toward preventing the widespread insurgency that many Islamic leaders have promised in Somalia.

Somali troops, with crucial aid from neighboring Ethiopia, drove the Council of Islamic Courts out of the capital and much of southern Somalia last month. But violence has been breaking out due to traditional clan rivalries and resentment among Somalis over the presence of Ethiopia.

Somalia , a Muslim country, and Ethiopia, with its large Christian population, fought a brutal war in 1977.

On Sunday, Somalia's government spokesman, Abdirahman Dinari, said Kenya has handed over 34 Islamic militiamen, and that some may be senior leaders of the Islamic movement.

Also Monday, Ethiopian troops killed three civilians in an area where Ethiopian forces have been attacked in recent days, a witness said.

The troops were firing at several gunmen who were trying to hide in a house in the Hurwa district, said Mustaf Hassan Ali, who saw the shooting in the neighborhood, considered a hotbed of sympathizers for the Islamic movement.

"The Ethiopians fired at the civilians when unknown gunmen sought refuge in their house," Ali said.

The government has invited African peacekeepers to help provide security in Somalia, but they are unlikely to come if fighting continues. African Union officials approved an 8,000-peacekeeper mission on Friday.

Somalia has been without an effective government since 1991, when warlords overthrew a dictator and turned on each other. The government was formed two years ago with the help of the United Nations, but was weakened by internal rifts.

The intervention of Ethiopia prompted a military advance that was a stunning turnaround for the administration, which is struggling to assert control in this chaotic country.

AP writers Mohamed Olad Hassan and Salad Duhul contributed to this report from Mogadishu, Somalia.

Source: The Associated Press

 


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