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Somali PM in Ethiopia amid debate on his fate

Issue 300
Front Page
Index
Headlines

Duale: “We’ll Take Pre-emptive Strike”

Somaliland Takes Control Of Las Anod

Haatuf Media Chairman Meets Lord Avebury In London

Media Executive of Prominent Radio Station Assassinated in Mogadishu

Somalia 'investigates' WFP head

Expert: Ethiopia's Invasion Of Somalia 'A Disastrous Miscalculation'

Mass Murder in the Horn of Africa

Who Is Behind The Campaign To Smear The Reputation Of SHURO-Net, And Why?

University Of SA On Somaliland In Ohio And Havana!!

Only fearful officials resign: Somalia PM

Islamist leader denies having links with Somaliland-Puntland fighting

Regional Affairs

Puntland Calls For Intervention In Regional Fighting

CPJ Condemns Assassination Of Prominent Somali Journalist

Editorial
Special Report

International News

Cheney increases U.S. oratory against Iran

Somalis’ Struggle In The UK

Somali Writer Added To 'Most Wanted' List In Minneapolis

Two plead guilty in slaying of teen who escaped war-torn Somalia

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

The Ogaden Crisis And Its Implications Within The Horn Of Africa Region

3 Top Govt. Officials Urgently Called in Addis Ababa

The Ethiopian Jewish community discovered by Scottish explorer

Can African Wildlife And Forest Be Protected?

Worldwide Press Freedom Index 2007 - Eritrea Ranked Last For First Time While G8 Members, Except Russia, Recover Lost Ground

Taiwan is already a `normal country'

THE DENTION OF Dr. YUSUF ALI HARUN THE FULL STORY

Eyes Wide Shut

Iranian-Born German Striker Refuses To Play In Israel

Food for thought

Opinions

A letter of appeal for cessation of hostilities to the leaders of Somaliland and Puntland

How Puntland Administration Has Become A Rudderless Ship In Sool

Recover After Heart Surgery

All Las-Anoders Are Winners

The Theories And Realities Of Kulmiye!!

Somalilanders Refute The Claims From Puntland

A Job Well Done For President Rayale But What Is Next?

Complaint About Your Editorial

 

Ali Mohamed Ghedi in Ethiopia (19 October 2007)
Prime Minister Ali Mohamed Gedi

By Tsegaye Tadesse

Addis Ababa, 17 October 2007 - Somali Prime Minister Ali Mohamed Gedi met Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi in Addis Ababa on Wednesday, amid speculation he would quit as parliament debated the president's move to oust him.

Gedi, in his latest battle for political survival against President Abdullahi Yusuf, again denied through his allies that he was going to step down.

"I talked to him when he was at the airport and he didn't say anything like that," said Somalia's ambassador to Kenya and longtime Gedi confidante, Ali Mohamed Nur "Americo".

Gedi spokesman Abdullahi Odka in Baidoa said the prime minister flew to Ethiopia to meet the African Union, officials from donor countries and the Addis Ababa government.

Gedi met with Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi, with whom Gedi has personal ties going back to Meles' time as a rebel leader in exile in Mogadishu, as soon as he arrived, Ethiopian officials said.

Ethiopian manoeuvring put both Yusuf and Gedi in power at peace talks in Kenya in late 2004, but the two have duelled from the start -- from the location of a government base to most recently, oil exploration contracts.

Yusuf's allies tried a no-confidence vote against Gedi last year, which failed, but have renewed their push.

Yusuf argues Gedi's 30-month mandate is over, while Gedi says he has another 14 months left and parliament must decide.

Debating in a warehouse in the south-central trading town of Baidoa, 227 legislators on Wednesday argued for and against putting the Gedi question up for a vote.

Speaker Sheikh Adan Madobe put the legislature in recess until Saturday after Gedi was whisked off to a waiting Ethiopian airplane, witnesses said.

A number of lawmakers and diplomats following the parliamentary machinations to oust Gedi said he was heading to Addis Ababa to resign.

"He will quit there, and he will not come back to Somalia," legislator Ali Basha, a close Yusuf ally, told Reuters by phone from Baidoa. "His main concern was his own personal security."

Baidoa has been tense during the parliamentary showdown with militias from Yusuf's Darod and Gedi's Hawiye clans protecting them, along with the usual presence of Somali soldiers and Ethiopian troops.

Diplomats say they are tired of the bickering impeding progress and have hinted at corruption in the government, the 14th attempt to install central rule since anarchy set in with the 1991 ouster of dictator Mohamed Siad Barre.

Neither Gedi nor Yusuf has been publicly accused of corruption.

"Gedi has been given the same kind of deal the American government gave (former Kenyan President Daniel arap) Moi -- leave quietly and no jail," said a Somalia expert in Nairobi who is not permitted to speak to the media.

The expert did not say who had made that ultimatum to Gedi.

Source: Reuters


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