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Blame game
over Somali conflict
13/04/2007
20:24 - (SA)
Nairobi, Kenya - Somali, Ethiopian and
Eritrean officials traded accusations on
Friday about their roles in Somalia's
conflict, highlighting concerns Somalia
could destabilise the Horn of Africa region
and beyond.
At a regional meeting in the Kenyan
capital, Nairobi to review the situation in
Somalia, an African Union official also said
the group's peacekeeping force in Somalia
has not received promised financial and
logistical support.
Officials of Somalia and Ethiopia - whose
forces are fighting an insurgency in the
Somali capital, Mogadishu - accused Eritrea
of undermining Somalia's transitional
government and being involved in terrorism
in the region. An Eritrean official denied
the allegations.
Somalia's Foreign Minister Ishmael Hurreh
told his fellow ministers Eritrea's actions
included "the use of force".
Ethiopia's Minister of State for Foreign
Affairs Tekeda Alemu charged that "Eritrea
is not simply supporting terrorism, it is
actively involved in terrorism in Ethiopia
and our sub-region".
Amdeab Ghebremeskel, director of African
Affairs in Eritrea's Foreign Affairs
ministry, countered that Ethiopia's military
intervention had resulted in Somalia
entering "a new and very dangerous phase
neither advancing peace and stability nor
democracy".
The Nairobi meeting brought together the
seven members of the Intergovernmental
Authority on Development: Djibouti, Eritrea,
Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia, Sudan and Uganda.
Financial shortfall
Earlier in the meeting, Said Djinnit, the
African Union's peace and security
commissioner, appealed to donors who made
pledges to the African Union peacekeeping
force in Somalia to release the funds
urgently.
"We still face a serious financial
shortfall and lack of logistical support,"
Djinnit told the meeting.
The delay in deploying a peacekeeping
force that regional leaders had first
recommended in January 2005, "not only
complicated the political situation and help
internationalise the conflict in Somalia but
led to a costly war affecting the security
of the entire region", said Attalla Bashir,
executive secretary of the Intergovernmental
Authority on Development.
The UN Security Council did not authorise
the peacekeeping mission until December when
it eased an arms embargo on Somalia to allow
the troops to take arms to the Horn of
Africa nation.
So far only the vanguard of the African
Union peacekeeping force has been deployed
in Somalia, made up of about 1 400 Ugandan
troops who went to Somalia in March this
year. Burundi is the only other country that
has agreed to contribute troops to the
mission that the African Union says needs to
be 8 000-strong. It is not clear what has
delayed Burundi's deployment of troops.
Since the Ugandan peacekeepers went to
Mogadishu, the city has experienced the
worst fighting in 15 years there with a
local human rights group reporting hundreds
of civilians killed in a four days of
bloodshed that began in late March.
The African Union peacekeepers have come
under attack themselves from insurgents
linked to the Council of Islamic Courts,
which was driven out of the capital and
southern Somalia strongholds in December by
Somali and Ethiopian soldiers, accompanied
by US special forces.
One peacekeepers has been killed so far
and missiles have been fired at two of the
force's cargo planes, one crashing and
killing all 11 crew on board |