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Mogadishu Security Tightened Before Conference
Issue 283
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MPs: ‘Treaties signed by the government are not legitimate unless approved by Parliament’

Somaliland's International Isolation Draws Mixed Reactions In Accra

“We Have Signed Memoranda Of Understanding (MoUs) On Returns With Somaliland…” British House Of Common’s Written answers

Somaliland Leader On Italy Charm Offensive

At Least Six Dead In Somalia Inter-Clan Violence

Somali Authorities Impose Curfew As Killings Mount

In Ethiopian Desert, Fear and Cries of Army Brutality

African immigrants succed economically, though rates vary by country

New World Order – Theory

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Puntland President Attacks Eritrea-Based Dissidents

Police stations raided in Somalia

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CIA to release 1970s documents on agency’s crimes

Phase Two Of Clock Tower Memorial Bricks Begins

Pakistan Scholars Honor Bin Laden In Rushdie Row

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Ethiopia: Risky Business In Ethiopia’s Somali Region

Bob Geldof Visits The Many Sides Of Africa

‘We Can't Go Forward And We Can't Go Back’

The Victims Of Capitalism

Statement by the Independent Expert on the situation of human rights in Somalia

Food for thought

Opinions

President Rayale’s Achievements And Failures

The Where About Of Adal

Ethiopia's Airline Of Checking Every Passenger's Luggage Is The Rightway!

SOMALIA: ENTRENCHING ETHIO-OCCUPATION, HUMANITARIAN CRISIS AND FARCE CONGRESS

The UN Renews Its Campaign Against Somali Livestock

Ungovernable Somalia And The Imminent Collision Of External Interests

What role would Ethiopia/USA play to tackle the Somaliland/Somalia issue?


Nairobi, 22 June 2007 - Barely three weeks before the Somali national reconciliation conference opens, the government has tightened security in the capital, Mogadishu, to ensure the meeting is not disrupted, a spokesman said.

The conference, scheduled for 15 July, is expected to mark a turning point for the war-ravaged country and will be attended by various political and clan groups.

"The National Security Council has decided to impose a curfew on Mogadishu, starting on Friday [22 June] evening," said Abdi Haji Gobdon, the government's spokesman, adding that the decision had been taken by the head of intelligence services, Mohamed Warsame Darawiish, after recent violence.

But as the government announced the curfew, eight people, including two policemen, were killed on 21 June when suspected insurgents threw a grenade at a police patrol in the Bakara market area [south Mogadishu], according to local residents.

"The government wants to make sure that the security situation is such that it is conducive to holding a successful conference," Gobdon added.

A regional analyst, however, told IRIN the problem in the city was political "and addressing it solely with security measures is not going to succeed". He said large-scale arrests, especially of civil society leaders, would mean the curfew would be seen "more as a measure of repression than one of reassurance".

Meanwhile, the UN World Food Programme (WFP) on 22 June appealed to the Kenyan government to allow 140 trucks carrying food designed to assist more than 100,000 people through the border.

"The Kenyan overland route was chosen because of major problems with sea routes to Somalia plagued by pirate attacks," said WFP Somalia country director, Peter Goossens. "Delays in distributing food this month to 108,000 people in Gedo district risks further aggravating the alarming rates of malnutrition that are already reported there."

Source: UN Integrated Regional Information Networks


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