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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

Briton Linked To Hostage Deal With Somali Pirates Is Arrested

Nairobi, September 12, 2009 – A Briton is facing trial in Somalia after being caught up in an exchange of hostages and pirates between the Horn of Africa and the Seychelles.
The Briton, whose name has not been released, has been described by authorities in Puntland region as a "facilitator" in a plan to hand a party of arrested Somali pirates back to their gang in return for the release of three sailors from the Seychelles.
The arrested man and a Kenyan citizen are believed to be security contractors who had accompanied 23 suspected pirates who had been handed over to Seychelles authorities earlier this year.
With Somalia gripped by a civil war and pirate gangs demanding million-dollar ransoms, an increasing number of private security firms are working in the region.
The pirates were transported to Somalia on a clandestine flight on board two planes last Sunday.
Ahmed Ali Salad, governor of Mudug region in the semiautonomous region of Puntland, said the pilots told authorities they were carrying humanitarian goods.
This is disputed by authorities in the Seychelles, who have denied any involvement in illegal prisoner swaps. Joel Morgan, the small nation's minister in charge of piracy, denied any deal was struck, saying the men were released due to a lack of evidence.
Governor Salad painted a different picture. "We sent the police force but by the time they arrived the planes were already in the air, so you can imagine how well-organised the plan was," he said.
The police caught up with the planes at a refuelling stop on Sunday, arresting everyone on board.
The three sailors, who have been held by pirates since being taken hostage last February, have been handed over to the International Red Cross and are expected to be sent home.
The fate of the Briton and Kenyan will be decided by a Puntland court in the coming days.
The Seychelles, which relies on international fishing licences to support its economy, would be seriously compromised if it emerged that it was releasing pirates arrested on the archipelago for trial by international patrols.
At present it is one of only two countries, along with Kenya, where the international armada policing the Indian Ocean near Somalia can take suspected pirates for trial.
Source: The Independent, Sept 11, 2009

 





 






 

 


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