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Issue 407

Front Page

News Headlines

Two Alleged Terrorists Surrender To Somaliland Security

Pakistani Delegation Arrives In Somaliland

Talks Between Puntland And Sheikh Sharif Fail

Supreme Court And Attorney General Play Football With Case Against Somaliland’s Political Parties

Port Of Berbera Receives Longest Ship

Somaliland To Boost Tourism

Somaliland Stability 'At Risk'

Saudi Livestock Move Boosts Somaliland Economy

Local and Regional Affairs

Somaliland Shelters War-Displaced

Somaliland Police Arrest Two Linked To Daallo Hijack

Somalia: Peacekeeping Operations

China Pledges $10bn In Africa Loans

Sheep Meat Price May Fall

Eyewitness: Somali Pirates Tried To Seize Plane, Passengers

Somalia Terrorist Group Suspected In Killing Of Puntland Judge

For The First Time, Child Health Days Reach Displaced Communities In Afgoye, South Somalia

Alleged Somali Terrorist Financier Is Identified

France Captures 12 Suspected Somali Pirates

EU Plans To Provide Training For Somali Units

US Man Sues FBI Agents Over Detention In Somalia, Ethiopia

The GPS Pirates

Djibouti Repatriates 40 Somali Asylum Seekers: UN

NATO And Maritime Partners Visit Beijing And Strengthen Global Fight Against Piracy

UN Somalia Office To Relocate To Mogadishu

Editorial

Somaliland Political Parties Should Be Held Accountable

Features & Commentary

Somaliland Surviving The Agonizing Process Of International Recognition

Somaliland: An African Struggle For Nationhood And International Recognition

Who Are The Real Pirates In Somalia?

Return Of The Somali Pirates

Iran’s Plans Are Destructive And Could Turn Yemen Into Another Somalia

International News

NASA Discovers 'Significant' Amount Of Water On Moon

9/11 Family Members Welcome, Criticize Civilian Trials

Windows 7 Borrowed 'Look' Of Mac

The "Kings" Of Saudi Arabia Take To The Streets

Gulf States Worried Iran Is Using Yemen To Increase Its Regional Influence

Opinion

Youth In Somaliland: Where Do They Stand?

Somalia Needs Honest Government

Sharif’s Cabinet: Wolves In Sheep’s Clothing

Open Letter To: The World Funding Organizations

EU Plans To Provide Training For Somali Units

Brussels, November 14, 2009 — The European Union is to endorse next week a plan to train up to 2,000 security personnel from Somalia, as the EU broadens engagement in the crisis hit Horn of Africa country, officials said on Friday.
The plan would see up to 200 EU soldiers train Somali military and police in neighboring Uganda, probably for a year, following a request from the interim government in Mogadishu to help build a 6,000-strong security force.
The decision, expected on Tuesday in Brussels at a meeting of EU foreign, defence and development ministers, would launch official planning for the mission, said the spokeswoman for EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana.
"Once this is approved, which we expect is going to happen during the (EU) council then we will be launching the real planning," the spokeswoman, Cristina Gallach, told reporters.
"We will be exploring how we can support, in addition to what we do with piracy on the high seas, the transitional government," she said.
"We think that this is a very good contribution to the global approach that the European Union has in order to tackle the Somali problems and all of its impact," she said.
The training, which may need to be carried out in two or three phases over a year, will involve Somalis numbering "in the low thousands. Initially we might be talking about 1,000 and 2,000," Gallach said.
"Less than 200 trainers" from Europe will be needed, she said.
The EU is still struggling to build a police mission of around 400 staff in Afghanistan, but given this work will take place in Uganda away from security problems officials said the trainers could be found by year's end.
Off the coast of Somalia, the EU is currently running an anti-piracy mission in the waters of the Gulf of Aden, but senior officials have long conceded that the only real way to combat the problem is on the ground.
Somalia has been gripped by civil wars and insurgencies and bereft of stable government since the overthrow of president Mohamed Siyad Barre in 1991.
The capital Mogadishu has been ravaged by violence that worsened in May when the insurgents stepped up an offensive against the internationally-backed government of President Sharif Sheikh Ahmed.
Source: AFP




 


 


 










 

 


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