Issue 378
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Thursday, April 23, 2009
International leaders gathered Thursday for a one-day meeting aimed at
boosting security in Somalia to halt the growing piracy problem in the
region.
The conference in Brussels, Belgium, is aimed at supporting Somalia's
security and stability through more funding. Organized by the European
Union, it also includes leaders of the United Nations and African Union.
"Assisting Somalia's new government to establish increased security and
stability across the country is critical for tackling the root causes of
piracy," the EU said in a statement about the meeting. "Recent events
show that piracy is increasingly putting in jeopardy the security of
ships in the Gulf of Aden and in the wider maritime region."
A dramatic increase in activity by Somali pirates led to a near-doubling
in the number of pirate attacks in the first quarter of 2009, according
to figures released this week by the International Maritime Bureau,
which issues regular reports on piracy worldwide.
Pirate attacks on ships in the Gulf of Aden and off Somalia's east coast
accounted for 61 of the 102 attacks during the first quarter. That
compares to six incidents for the same period in 2008, the IMB said.
The EU and several nations, including the United States, have naval
forces in the region to protect vessels against pirate attacks. The head
of EU naval forces in the waters off Somalia said he believes navies can
defeat pirates on the high seas, but ultimately restoring long-term
stability to Somalia will be what stops the attacks.
Still, Rear-Admiral Philip Jones told CNN, "It'll be a long period of
time before that's successful, and we must be ready to secure the seas
until that's in place."
Somalia's prime minister said Thursday that those naval vessels are not
solving the problem, and he pointed to the recent increase in pirate
attacks as evidence that they're not working.
Prime Minister Omar Abdirashid Ali Sharmarke called for a lifting of the
U.N. arms embargo on Somalia so the government can fight back against
the pirates and local militant groups like the Islamist fundamentalist
group al-Shabaab.
"One of our biggest problems is that al-Shabaab has AK-47s, and the
pirates have AK-47s, and the government has AK-47s," the prime minister
told CNN's David McKenzie in Nairobi, Kenya. "You can't expect the
government to win against such a problem. The only way is to have
sufficient capability, and it starts with lifting the arms embargo. You
know, we have been handicapped by those sanctions."
The arms embargo on Somalia has been in effect for more than 16 years.
Most serviceable weapons and almost all ammunition currently available
in the country have been delivered since 1992, in violation of the
embargo, according to the U.N. Security Council.
U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, who is attending the conference,
indicated Wednesday he is not ready to send in U.N. troops. He
recommended instead a phased approach to restoring security.
The idea of a U.N. peacekeeping force is "divisive," Ban said, and
"could exacerbate the conflict if pursued too soon."
Instead, Ban recommended supporting the existing African Union force in
Somalia, helping to build Somalia's own security institutions, and
supporting political reconciliation in the country. If that step works,
the U.N. would open a political office in Somalia to support the
country's political process, Ban said.
Then, if the U.N. presence succeeds, the U.N. Security Council could
decide on a U.N. peacekeeping operation to take over from the African
Union force, he said.
Human Rights Watch urged donors at the Brussels conference to make sure
their funding will not contribute to human rights abuses.
After international donors funded police training and salaries in 2007,
the group said, the police were widely implicated in serious human
rights abuses including armed robbery, the arbitrary detention of
civilians, and murder.
The group urged donors to vet personnel who receive financial assistance
and respond to serious abuses when they occur.
"Donors need to focus on improving security for Somali civilians, rather
than just for the transitional government," said Georgette Gagnon,
Africa director at Human Rights Watch. "Since Somalia's security forces
have committed so many violent abuses against civilians, efforts to
strengthen them also need to make them more accountable."
Somalian President Sheikh Sharif Sheekh Ahmed is at the conference,
along with Arab League Secretary-General Amr Moussa. The African Union's
commissioner for peace and security , Ramtane Lamamra, is also attending
with Acting Assistant U.S. Secretary of State Phillip Carter.
Source: CNN, April 23, 2009
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