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Somalia's Warlords Re-Emerge As A Threat

ISSUE 265
Front Page
Index
Headlines

Calm reigns again in Daror

Hargeysa local Authority doubles Abattoir fees

President Rayale fabricates new charges against Haatuf

Should The World Legitimize The Independence Of Somaliland?

We Have Built A Nation From Scratch

Playing Fire Alarm: AU Vs Somalia/Somaliland

Ugandan Troops Set to Arrive in Somalia as Part of AU Force

NUSOJ Is Worried About The Situation Of Detained Haatuf Journalists

Talks On Reconciliation, Peace Support In Somalia

Jimmy Carter leads delegation to Ethiopia, three African countries

Regional Affairs

Somaliland Forum: Mr. President, End The Subjugation Of Your Citizens

Attack against Spanish aid workers in Somalia

Editorial
Special Report

International News

Bush suffers defeat on Iraq troop plan

Former Houstonian Faces Terror Charges

Britons Detained In Africa Given Flight Home

Burundi's defense minister says 1,700 troops available to deploy to Somalia, but lack equipment

Killing three birds in Somalia

After Somalia, Who is next?

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Oil in Darfur? Special Ops in Somalia?

Questioning Bashir Goth, Editor of Awdal News

A Few Observations On The Relationship Between Ethiopia And Somaliland

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

Suleiman Hassan, Yemen “Now that my parents are both dead I am alone in this world”

The Rise And Fall Of The Islamic State Of Somalia

Food for thought

Opinions

The Warning Of History For The TFG

Apology; Not In The Name Of Democracy

A Letter To The Editor

Somaliland Is Regressing A Decade In All Fronts Not Progressing Mr. Rayale

The Incarceration Of Haatuf Journalists: A Scar On Somaliland Conscious

Awdalite Intellectuals Show Responsible Leadership On Haatuf Saga

Watch Your Language, Mr. Spokesman

Time To Backdown Mr. President


MOGADISHU, Somalia, February 14, 2007 – Somalia's warlords are re-emerging and pose a threat to humanitarian aid deliveries to the needy, the United Nations warned Wednesday, as the government struggles to quell growing unrest.

Rising violence and a power vacuum caused by the ousting of Islamic forces by the transitional government could lead to a return of the chaos that plagued Somalia for 16 years, the U.N. said in a monthly report.

The spiraling violence is also likely to undermine attempts to deploy an African Union peacekeeping mission designed to protect the country's weak, Ethiopian-backed government and train a new army for the lawless nation.

"The re-emergence of warlords also raises serious concerns about the need to ensure principled humanitarian action and a do-no-harm approach," the U.N said. The report warned it was critical to avoid the "coercion and violence" perpetrated by warlords and their militias in the past, as they sought to cash in on aid flowing into the country.

The U.N. estimates around 1 million Somalis need humanitarian aid.

In Mogadishu, the nation's restive capital of 2 million, gunmen are being paid $2 a day to serve as vigilantes, according to businessmen and residents. Fighting here has killed at least 25 people in the last two weeks.

"The government has to take responsibility for security, before they get help from African peacekeepers," said Abdi Mo'ali Husein, a resident who has organized private security efforts.

About 15 private checkpoints have been set up in residential areas and armed militia are being employed by businesses to prevent attacks, according to Ibrahim Omar Sabriye, Mogadishu's deputy mayor.

Mogadishu Police Chief Ali Sa'id Abdi said his officers are working to contain the violence.

Islamic extremists opposed to the government routinely attack official buildings in Mogadishu, as well as Ethiopian troops deployed here.

In December, Ethiopia sent thousands of soldiers into Somalia to help the U.N.-recognized government defeat an Islamic movement trying to take over the country.

The AU peacekeeping force would replace the Ethiopian soldiers, who are widely despised by Mogadishu residents. However, it is not clear if the peacekeepers would be welcome, either, after demonstrations over the weekend by Somalis opposed to the expected AU deployment.

The U.N. Security Council is discussing in New York a draft resolution on Somalia, giving its blessing to an AU peacekeeping force that would serve in the country for six months.

Ethiopia had planned to withdraw its forces quickly, although the growing unrest makes a full withdrawal unlikely until at least the arrival of AU troops.

Ethiopian Foreign Affairs Minister Seyoum Mesfin met with Somali President Abdillahi Yusuf on Tuesday in the southern town of Baidoa.

They discussed the worsening security situation and resurgence of resistance groups, said a government official who declined to give his name because he was not authorized to talk to the media.

Somalia has not had an effective national government since 1991, when warlords overthrew dictator Mohamed Siyad Barre and then turned on one another, throwing the country into anarchy. A transitional government was formed in 2004 with U.N. help, but has had little authority because it has no real army or police force.

Source: AP

 


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