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Five Nations Discuss Military Counterattack Against Somali Pirates

Issue 305
Front Page
Index
Headlines

Jigjiga Officials Persecute Somalilanders

Religious Leaders From Somaliland, Somalia & East African Countries Hold Peace-Building Conference In Hargeysa

Somaliland Foreign Minister Sets The Record On Somaliland Delegation To Commonwealth Summit In Kampala, Uganda

Siyad Barre’s Security Court Prosecutor In 1981-1989 Has Been Appointed As Somalia’s New PM

When Your Only Weapon Is Shame

Badhan District In Eastern Sanag Embraces Somaliland

Canadian Oil Chief In Puntland For Exploration

Somali Opposition Dismiss Nomination Of New PM

US Concerned About Mounting Humanitarian Crisis in Somalia

Somaliland Security Forces Reach Border without Resistance

Somali president picks new prime minister

Five Nations Discuss Military Counterattack Against Somali Pirates

Dangerous Times for Africa

Regional Affairs

Haabsade warm welcome and his new political stand

Queen Praises Country for War On Aids and Somali Mission

Editorial
Special Report

International News

The doves of war

Security Council Rejects UN Chief's Opposition To UN Force In Somalia

Jarch Capital’s Sudanese Gambit

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

The U.S. secret war in the Horn of Africa

Somaliland: Religious Leaders' Declaration On Peace-Building

WHO DOES THE ONLF REPRESENT?

LETTER FROM CARITAS SOMALIA

The unreported destruction of Somalia

The Commonwealth and conflict
Don't dare put me in a box

Food for thought

Opinions

Somaliland: Will "The Change" Really Bring A Change?

Recent Statement By Meles Zenawi

Pro-Ethiopia—TFG Group’s Cunning Strategy Of Divide And Conquer

Somaliland And Our Arab Nations Brothers

Las-Anod, A Month Later

UDUB Resorts To Import Voters From Djibouti As Rehabilitating Nationals

Haabsade has brought a PR disaster to Hargeysa

Somaliland and the press law

 

Seoul, South Korea, November 22, 2007 - Five countries fed up with hijackings of commercial ships off Somalia's coast are seeking the authority to conduct military operations against African pirates.

The United Kingdom, Denmark, France, South Korea and Spain will ask the International Maritime Organization (IMO) to approve a resolution allowing military rescue of ships attacked or under attack from Somali pirates. The countries will make the proposal in the IMO's meeting in London this month.

An official from South Korea's Foreign Ministry said the countries will also explain to Somalia the need for military intervention and ask its government to allow such action in special cases.

The move is similar to what the U.S. is doing. The unnamed official said U.S. warships have confronted Somali pirates several times without first obtaining permission from Mogadishu.

Seoul also wants to stop pirates from attacking South Korean ships and kidnapping South Korean crews. Somali pirates hijacked two South Korean-owned vessels in May and took four South Korean officers hostage together with the vessels' other crews.

Source: AHN

 


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