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Issue 398

Front Page

News Headlines

Somaliland Government Instigates Violence To Derail President’s Impeachment

Vice President Ahmed Yusuf Yasin: Somaliland Will Solve Election Problems Through Dialogue And Compromise

UN Secretary General’s Representative Arrives In Somaliland

Hussein Ismail Yusuf Shames Parliament And Himself

Somaliland President Shuts Down Parliament After Impeachment Motion

Barwaaqo Puts Together Collection On Somali Prosody

New Classes Added To Surud School

Security Office Opened In Las Anod

Local and Regional Affairs

Somaliland Elections Postponed Once Again

AU Envoy Expresses Concern Over Tension In Somaliland

Pirate-Plagued Somalia Trains 500 Navy Recruits

Police Take Control Of Somaliland Parliament

Tackling Scourge Of Piracy Requires Broader Approach, UN Official Says

Top UN Envoy Visits Somaliland

Former U Student Killed In Somalia Friday

EU Boosts Relief Aid To Ethiopia

Somali Woman Pleads Guilty To Assault

Briton Linked To Hostage Deal With Somali Pirates Is Arrested

Livestock Export Trade To Resume Soon-Somali Minister Said

UN Chief Vows Continued Support For International Criminal Court

Mohamed Yonis Of Somaliland Appointed Deputy Joint Special Representative For Operations In Darfur Hybrid Operation

Ramadan Fighting In Mogadishu Is "Worst In 20 Years"

ICG: Ethiopia Risks Pre-Election Violence In 2010

Press Releases: United States Formally Commits To Best Practices To Counter Piracy Off The Coast Of Somalia

Editorial

The Impeachment Drive, The Government-Orchestrated Violence, And Somaliland’s Wounded Democracy

Features & Commentary

Street Children "Becoming The New Gangsters"

Somaliland Faces A Tipping Point

You Will Get Your Visa After Six Months, Sir

Somali 'Travelers': The Holiest Gang, Part I

Dahabshiil Earns International Respect

Innovation in Software: Somaliland – When Software Projects Destroy Countries

How Diaspora Funds Somali Pirates

American Islamist Killed As Somali Clashes Intensify

UN Role In Somalia Comes Under Fire

Al Qaeda Extends To Somalia, Yemen

International News

Ceremonies Mark 8th Anniversary Of September 11 Terrorist Attacks

Usain Bolt Beaten By Cheetah Who Runs 100m In 6.13 Seconds

Caster Semenya: Gender Row Runner Is ‘Half Man And Half Woman’

Putin Signals Desire To Return To Presidency

Former Taiwan Leader Sentenced To Life Imprisonment Over Corruption Charges

Opinion

“My Cousin, Mr. President, Let Go With Dignity”

Somaliland Parliament Under Presidential Assault

Somaliland: Playground For Al-Shabaab Terrorists, Al-Somali Regime, Al-Garoweonline Tabloid

Besieging The Parliament And The Assault On Somaliland Democracy

An Open Letter Regarding The Deteriorating Situation Of Somaliland

In Somaliland, Democracy Relies On Healthy Dialogue

Somaliland: United Nations Political Department Free Zone

Riyale And His Thugs Resorts To Violence Out Of Desperation And Cowardly Act

Tackling Scourge Of Piracy Requires Broader Approach, UN Official Says

New York, September 12, 2009 – Continuing piracy-related incidents off Somalia and their increasing sophistication illustrates the weaknesses of an entirely sea-based approach to combating the scourge, a senior United Nations official said on Thursday.

João Honwana, Director of the Africa I Division of the Department of Political Affairs (DPA), told a meeting of the Contact Group on piracy off the coast of Somalia – held at UN Headquarters – that the situation showed the need for the international community to deal with the issue of piracy in a comprehensive, cohesive and broad-based manner.

“The international community’s engagement at sea remains necessary and has demonstrated its deterrent value,” he said. “But the continued increase in the [number of incidents]… underscores the limits of an exclusively sea-based approach.”

Mr. Honwana said the UN has been strengthening the capacities of individual Member States to ensure that suspected pirates are prosecuted through harmonizing national laws with the international legal regime.

The UN, through its Office of Legal Affairs (OLA) and the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), is also assisting with efforts to encourage more States to share the burden of prosecuting and imprisoning pirates, which has largely fallen to Kenya.

UNODC has helped countries review their counter-piracy laws, provided training for prosecutors, developed court facilities in the Kenyan port city of Mombasa, delivered witnesses to trial and improved prison conditions and reduced overcrowding.

Mr. Honwana said the UN would also continue to provide technical support to authorities across Somalia.

“UNODC and UNDP [the UN Development Programme] are working on the improvement of prison conditions in Puntland and Somaliland to allow the transfer of convicted pirates back to Somalia, and in the longer term, increase the capacity of Somalia’s basic legal and institutional structures.

“In this regard, international support towards rebuilding Somali institutions is crucial to combat piracy, while also creating livelihood opportunities for the local communities.”

Mr. Honwana reiterated the UN’s request to the Contact Group to set up a new working group focused on land-based initiatives to tackle the root causes of piracy, while an international trust fund is also being created to channel resources to projects and activities that deal with piracy.

Yesterday, dozens of countries signed up at UN Headquarters to a declaration that commits them to taking greater steps to prevent or delay further pirate attacks. The so-called New York Declaration, which is non-binding, calls on signatories to make widely known “best management practices” for ships and other vessels to protect themselves against possible attacks on pirates.

The declaration was first proposed in May by four of the countries with the world’s largest ship registries – Panama, the Bahamas, Liberia and the Marshall Islands. Yesterday’s signatories included the United States, China, France and the United Kingdom.

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Source: UN News Service, September 10, 2009


 

 





 






 

 


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