AU head
wants extension for Somalia peace force.
(Addis Ababa
January 18,
2008 Ceegaag Online)
The African Union (AU)
Commission's chairman recommended on Friday a six-month
extension for a peacekeeping force in Somalia and lashed out
at member states for failing to honor pledges for troops.
A 1,800-strong AU Mission
in Somalia (AMISOM) has been carrying out peacekeeping
duties in Mogadishu, where Islamist insurgents have been
fighting an interim government. Near daily clashes in the
capital killed 6,500 civilians in 2007.
"It is my earnest hope that
the Peace and Security Council ... adopt my recommendation
to extend the mandate of AMISOM for another period of six
months," Chairman Alpha Konare said in a report on Somalia.
Only troops from Uganda and
Burundi are in Somalia, although the AU wanted 8,000 for the
city that is a byword for anarchy.
"To date, the pledges made
by member states to contribute troops for AMISOM represent
only a little over half of the authorized strength,
depriving AMISOM to live up to its responsibilities towards
Somalia and its people," he said.
Konare also accused the
international community of failing to support the force
financially and asked the UN to authorize its own force to
replace AMISOM.
"In spite of numerous
appeals made by the AU echoed by UN Security Council in
several resolutions, the financial and logistical support
mobilised so far is far short of what is required to fully
deploy the mission," he said.
Konare asked Somali's
transitional government, led by President Abdullahi Yusuf,
to adopt an inclusive approach that would appeal to Somalis
that reject violence.
More than 600,000 people
have fled their homes due to fighting that erupted when
Yusuf's government, with the aid of Ethiopian troops,
unseated an Islamist movement from Mogadishu
Source: Reuters
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