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Issue 544/ 30th June - 06th July 2012

Front Page

Somaliland News

News Headlines

Amoud Foundation And Awdal/Selel Committee For Drought Relief Deliver Aid

Businessman Oomaar Donates Food For Awdal Drought Relief; Work Starts On Dila/Borama Road

Ethiopia: Somalia And Somaliland Presidents Meet In Dubai

Local and Regional Affairs

Somaliland’s President Appeals For Drought Assistance And Relief Aid

A Show Of Cooperation And Unity For Somalia

$1 Million UAE Grant Will Help Us Fight The Pirates, Says Somalia

Kenya: Three In Hospital After Clash With Lions

East Africa: Exploring The Qat Trade - Leaves Of The Horn

Testing The Water After Years Of War, The Swimmers Of Mogadishu Lido

United States Ambassador To Kenya Resigns

Editorial

Plus Ça Change, Plus C'est La Même Chose

Features & Commentary

US Congress ‘Victimizes’ Somali Americans

Somaliland’s Last Year As A Protectorate

British Museum Highlights Strange Money From Around The World

Khat Fight: Harmless Recreational Drug Or A Recruitment Tool For Terrorists?

International News

Opinion

52nd Somaliland Independence And Somaliland-Somalia Dialogue In London

A Dialogue On The Subject Of A Previous Dialogue

Re: The Talks Between Somaliland And Somalia

Sheikh Sharif Is Confident That UAE Arab Mediators Will Force Sillanyo To Accept Federalism

A Show Of Cooperation And Unity For Somalia

Allan Jacob and Ahmed Al Majaida
Dubai, UAE, June 30, 2012 – Much has been talked about piracy and its perpetrators, but more needs to be done for Somalia and its people. That was the message delegates took home from the second counter piracy conference in Dubai. Robust action against criminals at sea has paid dividends with three coalition naval forces and other navies taking the fight into the pirates’ lair in Somalia.

In the battle against maritime piracy and its origins, the UAE has played planner to perfection and has brought together different countries and the shipping industry to strategize and evaluate their options. A comprehensive solution to the problem was what the UAE sought and it got it when the Somalia and Somaliland delegations came together for a common cause after 21 years.

“This agreement is important because it opens channels of communication between the two sides,” said UAE Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Dr Anwar Mohammed Gargash.

He hoped it would be the beginning of many good things in the troubled Horn of Africa region. Somalia makes its political transition on August 20 with a new parliament.

Gargash called for patience and a “step-by-step approach” as Somalia’s transitional government President Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed and Somaliland’s President Ahmed Mahamoud Sillanyo stood shoulder to shoulder after signing the Dubai Statement, their new bonhomie for all to see.

‘‘It was a moving show of cooperation and unity and it will need further cooperation on the ground,’’ he added. On Wednesday, the UAE put money where its words were with a contribution $1 million. Think-tank, Oceans Beyond Piracy, added another $ 1 million on the concluding day of the conference.

The money will go into a trust fund for Somalia to boost the capabilities of its coastal and armed forces. New projects for the country are also being planned to benefit the youth. ‘‘Entrepreneurial efforts in Somalia will be funded with the contribution to prevent youth from taking to a life of crime at sea,’’ said Jon Huggins, Director of Oceans Beyond Piracy. A legal framework to try pirates is in the works and will be in place by 2014.

The UAE has set the ball rolling for Somalia. Threats from rebels and pirates, but there is plenty to gain from the second conference in Dubai where a window for peace has been opened.

news@khaleejtimes.com

Source: Khaleej Times


 


 


 



 



 


 



 



 

 


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