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Top Somali warlord: willing to talk?

Issue 386

Front Page

News Headlines

French Embassy Official Praises Somaliland Democracy

National Examinations Scheduled For June 20th

Somaliland President Visits Kuwait

Muse Bihi Warns Somaliland Clerics

Maryam Mursal Builds School In Hargeysa

Garaad Saleebaan Daahir AF-Qarshe Passes Away

DRC Donates Tools Of The Trade To Borama Barbers

Candlelight Helps The Needy In Erigavo

Local and Regional Affairs

Somaliland Extends Bid Round For Hydrocarbon Exploration Until December 2009

U.S. Condemns Murder of Omar Hashi

Top Somali Warlord: Willing To Talk?

Mobile Phone Banking For Somalia

Imperial Jets Assisting With Evacuations From Battle-Worn Region Of Somalia

Somali Security Minister Killed-President

The United States Seeks To Engage Eritrea

World Condemns Suicide Car Bombings In Somalia

IGAD: Wayward Means To Sully Eritrea

Africa Pioneers Mobile Bank Push

Somaliland Gives Suitors Breathing Space

Telesom Launches Zad Mobile Banking Service In Somalia

Mogadishu Police Chief Among 22 Killed In Clashes

Puntland Minister Says Positive Feedback From Ethiopia Visit

Editorial

Is Said Samatar Mourning The Death Of Somali Literature Or The Death Of His Views On Somali Literature?

Features & Commentary

Somaliland's Lovesick Baker And The Girl He Never Had

From Corporate America To The Horn Of Africa, Money Makes The World Go Around

Just Another Day For Hargeysa's Street Children

Burgeoning Population Drains Hargeysa Water Supply

I’ve Learnt To Share Power Like Nelson Mandela, Says Morgan Tsvangirai

Ethiopia - A Source Country For Trafficked People - State Department

Weapons For Warlords: Arms Trafficking In The Gulf Of Aden

Kenya: Unfinished Business - Moving Forward

Somaliland: Postponed Elections Create Chaos

Obama Will Back Green Energy In Asian And Indonesia

How To Make Friends And Influence People

International News

 

Sect. Of State Hillary Clinton Resting After Surgery On Broken Elbow

Iran's Supreme Leader Calls For Calm, Rules Out Vote Rigging

UNHCR Annual Report Shows 42 Million People Uprooted Worldwide

Opinion

Politics Has Earned Such A Bad Name For Itself! So Imagine When Bad People Used

Somaliland Is Here To Stay!

President Obama Can Empower Africans

The fiery Sheikh Dahir Aweys may be ready to hash out a peace deal, following weeks of fighting the moderate government of Sheikh Sharif Ahmed.

By Scott Baldauf | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor 

Johannesburg, South Africa, June 18, 2009 – After weeks of fighting, Somalia's moderate Islamist government and its militant rivals appear close to starting peace talks.

This week, top militant Islamist leader Sheikh Dahir Aweys told reporters that he had submitted to the pressure of Somali clan elders to stop his punishing fight against the transitional government of Sheikh Sharif Ahmed and begin talks.

"We took the correct step, which is to accept and to participate in the peace process," Sheikh Aweys told reporters in Mogadishu, according to Garowe news service.

Another of Aweys's supporters, Malaaq Ali Malaaq Showri, also confirmed that Aweys and his Hizbul Islam militia were prepared to end the fighting and to start talking with the Sharif government.

Fighting between the Sharif government and an alliance of radical Islamist militias has had a devastating effect on the wartorn country, killing hundreds and sending at least 122,000 Somali citizens from their homes, and making them reliant on aid agencies for their survival.

Aid agencies have called Somalia the third largest humanitarian crisis in the world, but the continued fighting and collapse of effective government have caused ripples throughout the region and – because of rampant piracy – far out at sea as well. These talks could be the first positive sign that Somalia's conflict could be entering a more stable phase.

Behind-the-scenes jockeying for power

"What seems to be happening is that a lot of behind-the-scenes negotiation is taking place," says Paula Roque, a Horn of Africa specialist at the Institute for Security Studies in Tshwane (Pretoria). "Aweys may not have gotten the military successes he had been expecting and now he may be reassessing his political position."

Despite the peace overtures, there has been no let up in fighting. The Islamist faction Al Shabab, which shares an alliance with Aweys's Hizbul Islam, announced yesterday that it had taken territory from government forces north of Mogadishu. Fighting in Mogadishu itself claimed the lives of 10 civilians, along with the government's police chief.

Stalemate?

Yet the weeks of fighting have reached something of a stalemate, and pressure from Aweys's financial backers in the Arab world appears to have pushed Aweys to the bargaining table.

"He has been under great pressure from clan elders to stop the fighting," says Rashid Abdi, an expert on Somalia for the International Crisis Group in Nairobi. "He may also be realizing that the transitional government is not going to be a walkover. It is also possible that he may have been promised by the international community that his name may be removed from the terror watch list, if he begins talks with the Sharif government."

Although Aweys is a key figure within the Islamist movement – and as one of the most respected Islamic scholars in the country, a man impossible to ignore – his inclusion in talks with Sharif does not guarantee that other Islamist militias, including Al-Shabab, will also put down their guns and talk, says Mr. Abdi. "We just have to give the process some time."

Source: The Christian Science Monitor, June 17, 2009

 


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