Ethiopian
FM blasts Somalia’s leaders.
(Addis Ababa, Aug
22,
2008 Ceegaag Online)
Ethiopia has
blasted Somalia’s political leaders for getting bogged down
in ”internal squabbles” while millions of Somalis live on
the brink of a humanitarian disaster in a country that
remains violent and ungoverned.
Thousands of
Ethiopian troops invaded Somalia at the end of 2006 to
reinstall an interim government headed by president
Abdullahi Yusuf. But it has a tenuous grip on power and its
time in office has been marked by growing insurgency, clan
warfare, and the mass displacement of civilians.
Seyoum Mesfin,
Ethiopia’s foreign minister, told the Financial Times that a
rift between the president and prime minister Nur Hassan
Hussein, appointed eight months ago after his predecessor
fell out with Mr Yusuf, was the biggest obstacle to peace.
Ethiopia’s own
security and credibility are at stake in Somalia, which it
invaded to oust a coalition of Islamist groups that had
taken control. As the interim government’s main
international backer, it has closeted the president and
prime minister in Addis Ababa for the past week as it seeks
to bridge the divide between them.
In Mogadishu, the
Somali capital, Ethiopian soldiers and troops from the
transitional federal government remain the target of almost
daily attacks by Islamist insurgents and clan gunmen opposed
to Mr Yusuf’s regime.
“The main
challenge now is not what they call the enemy. It’s an
intra-government crisis that is preventing them from
focusing on the tasks they need to get done,” said Mr Mesfin.
“There has been a lack of vigour and, if I may say so, a
lack of commitment.”
Since the
beginning of last year more than 8,000 Somalis have been
killed and 1m forced from their homes by fighting, which has
centred on the capital Mogadishu. Humanitarian relief
efforts have been undermined by the assassination of aid
workers and the United Nations says that, due also to the
additional impact of a drought, up to 3.5m Somalis – or
nearly half the population – could need food aid later this
year.
But Mr Seyoum
gave a less bleak account of the security situation today
than many independent observers, saying the country was
experiencing less daily violence than Iraq and Afghanistan.
To create a durable peace, he said the president and the
prime minster needed to implement plans to create regional
administrations that would give people a greater stake in
government and, potentially, help to reconcile Somalia’s
warring clans and sub-clans.
The rift between
the leaders overshadowed the signing of a peace agreement in
Djibouti on Monday between the interim government and one of
two factions of the Somali political opposition. The
agreement was welcomed on Thursday by the African Union, but
it did little to lighten a mood of gloom among western
diplomats who follow Somalia, because it had already been
rejected by the other faction as well as by the al-Shabaab
Islamist extremists leading the insurgency.
Mr Seyoum said
that al-Shabaab, which the US says is linked to al-Qaeda,
had been critically weakened: “They cannot sustain their own
activities, let alone disband the government.” But other
analysts say their strength and boldness appears to be
increasing.
Source: FT
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