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Africa summit wraps up amid concern over Kenya, Chad
Issue 315
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Ministry of Water & Minerals about to Strike Deal with Rogue Puntland Oil Company: Range Resources Ltd

Jendayi Frazer Visits Somaliland

Halo Trust Officer Wounded After Being Shot By Aggrieved Ex-Employee

Somaliland Parliamentary Cross-Party Committee Travel To London

Justice & Welfare Party Calls Investigation of Omission

A Bill On Somaliland Recognition To Be Introduced To US Congress

UN’s Ethiopia-Eritrea force at risk

Somaliland Frees Puntland Pows - Puntland Vows To Retake Las Anod City

Somali soldiers storm central bank

Africa summit wraps up

Mogadishu faces its most difficult time

Rethinking Somalia’s plight

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Somaliland Responds To Statement Reportedly Made By Somali Leader

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UN Chief Seeks Way Out of Kenya's Post-Election Chaos

Leopard among the women: "Shabeelnaagood" A Somali play by Hassan Sheikh Mumin

Gulf investors eyes lured by high return Business Venture In Somalia

New US Commander prepares for Africa Assignment

JFK's Daughter Endorses Obama

Africa summit wraps up amid concern over Kenya, Chad

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Death of Somali Nationalism and Emergence of Siadist ends

What are the problems of somaliland’s national audit office and their possible solutions?

The Clan Rivalry Among Somalis Must End!

The Presidential trip: “The Most successful event”

In response To The Funny Kulmiye

Somaliland is at the critical junction

A tribute to Hassan Sheikh Mumin


Prime Minister of Somalia Nur Hassan Hussein

ADDIS ABABA, 2 Februay 2008 - African Union leaders condemned the latest unrest in Chad and Kenya Saturday at the close of a summit overshadowed by new crises on the continent and which saw little headway achieved on older ones.

The pan-African body's summit wrapped up even as military sources in Ndjamena said that rebels had seized control of the Chadian capital, where looting reportedly broke out after hours of heavy fighting.

"The assembly strongly condemns the attacks perpetrated by armed groups against the Chadian government and demands that an immediate end be put to these attacks and resulting bloodshed," the summit's final declaration said.

The 53-state body also announced that it had tasked Congolese President Denis Sassou-Nguesso and Libyan Moamer Kadhafi with spearheading efforts "aimed at finding a negotiated and peaceful solution to the current crisis".

Chadian rebels launched a massive offensive earlier this week from Sudan and were believed to be closing in on the presidential palace Saturday, where officials said President Idriss Deby Itno was holed up.

The African Union stressed it would reject any "unconstitutional change" of regime in Chad.

However it welcomed Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki among the ranks of the continent's heads of state and government despite a bitter row over alleged mass fraud related to his December 30 re-election.

Kenya's opposition had warned that accepting Kibaki's presence in Addis Ababa would amount to endorsing election results it says were rigged.

The row has ignited violence across the usually peaceful east African nation that has killed nearly 1,000 in a month and sparked international fears that what was once a rare island of stability in the region could sink into chaos.

Kenyan police said Saturday that 44 people had been killed in the last 24 hours.

The AU's final declaration expressed "deep concern" over the situation in Kenya and its potential consequences for regional stability.

Gabonese Foreign Minister Jean Ping, who will succeed Alpha Oumar Konare at the helm of the AU commission in three months after winning a vote on Friday, had earlier insisted that the body would not simply stand by.

"We want to act, that's for sure. In Kenya, there is already Kofi Annan for a mediation chosen by (outgoing AU chairman John) Kufuor. This mediation is at work," he told reporters.

AU leaders had been due to explore ways of boosting the body's credibility on the international scene and more effective ways of solving the continent's own conflicts.

"Our continent's future is in our hands," Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete said Thursday after being chosen as the AU's new chairman.

But the summit left the organisation grappling with two new crises and mounting challenges in its efforts to solve already existing problems.

The developments in Chad have delayed the deployment of a European peace mission tasked with protecting refugees from neighbouring Sudan's Darfur region.

The fighting also raises new challenges for a joint UN-AU peacekeeping force being deployed in Darfur, amid mutual accusations between Chad and Sudan of support for the other's rebels.

The final statement also called on member states to urgently contribute more troops to its peacekeeping mission in Somalia, which has not even reached half strength yet, a year after it was authorised.

Also on the agenda Saturday was the situation in the Comoros, where an AU mission has failed to rein in a rebel island and avert the growing risk of military action.

The Indian Ocean archipelago's president, Ahmed Abdallah Sambi, said Friday that the AU had accepted that military intervention against the island of Anjouan was an option and vowed to take decisive action very soon.

During the summit, African leaders also studied an audit ordered a year ago into the organisation's management, which had come under criticism during Konare's five-year tenure.

The next African Union summit will be held in July in the Egyptian Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh.

Source: AFP

 


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