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Somali President Yusuf ready To to talk Islamic Courts
President Asks somali elders To Mediate Truce With Islamic Courts" At a
time when the Al-Mujahidin Youth movement announced that it has
carried out an operation that it said was unprecedented, informed Somali
sources said yesterday that Somali President Abdullahi Yusuf was holding
contacts with officials from Hawiya tribe, the largest tribe which controls
Mogadishu, in a bid to convince the military wing of the Islamic Courts
organization in the capital to agree to a truce and a ceasefire between the
two sides.
The sources said that the mediation efforts led by former Somali
interior minister Muhammad Mahmud Guled were aimed at inducing the Islamic
Courts to halt their military activity in Mogadishu in return for its
participation in peace negotiations sponsored by the UN, the Arab League,
and the European Union.
They said there has been relative progress in the negotiations over the
past two days but denied there have been direct talks between the military
wing of the Courts and the Somali Government.
The sources added that the negotiations are taking place through the
clan leaders of the Hawiya tribe and that there was still a possibility of
a positive outcome emerging in the coming period. Somali President
Abdullahi Yusuf meanwhile accused Al-Qa'ida organization of launching a
wide-scale terror war against his Government in several parts of the
country and of supporting the armed movements that oppose him.
One of Yusuf's aides quoted him to Al-Sharq al-Awsat yesterday (7 March)
as affirming that Al-Qa'ida has very active elements in Somalia.
He said he was waging a ferocious war in an attempt to block those he
called terrorist groups from continuing to shake the security and stability
of the state that has been in a grueling civil war for the past 17 years.
The Somali President told Al-Sharq al-Awsat through his aide that the
bombing carried out lately by US warplanes against the locations of Al-Qa'ida
and those affiliated to it in southern Somalia were undertaken with his
knowledge and approval.
"We and the Americans are partners in combating terrorism and our
interests are identical in eradicating terrorists and preventing them from
turning the country into a safe haven for terror," he said. According to
his aide,
Yusuf also stressed that his security bodies had full information about
the parties that finance those terrorists, the names of the terrorists, and
the places where they were located as well as their nationalities as they
try to hit the stability and to prolong the civil war in his country.
He disclosed that there were foreigners from Al-Qa'ida inside Somalia to
bolster the abilities of the armed movements that are hostile to the
Transitional Government he has headed since October, 2004.
Yusuf urged the international community to extend all the necessary
financial and logistical support to his Government's efforts to combat
terrorism, considering that without acquiring such support the terrorist
danger increases in light of the limited capabilities at the disposal of
his Government. The Somali President reiterated that he will not negotiate
with any person whose hands are stained with the blood of the Somali people
and who has worked to procure foreign terrorists from Al-Qa'ida to come to
his country, pointing out that the war on terrorism is long and complex and
that it needs patience and biding of time.
Meanwhile the extremist Al-Mujahidin Youth movement, which is against
Yusuf and the foreign military presence in Somalia, announced that it
carried out yesterday a bold operation against the Ethiopian forces which
it described as the first of its type. ]
It said its elements penetrated the main defense line of the Ethiopian
forces on Al-Thalathin Street [jidka sodonka] in the Somali capital after a
vicious battle along the length of the street and in the neighboring
villages, according to a statement from the movement of which Al-sharq Al-Awsat
received a copy.
"We were able to eradicate a large number of Ethiopians from the first
defenses between the crossing of Barabj and Black Sea (in the capital)
stretching eastward to Libatgh and westward to the milk plant," it said.
The movement provided no details on losses sustained by the Ethiopian Army
or its elements, but it said that Ethiopian tanks responded by random
firing without inflicting any casualties among its elements. An African
Union official who spoke to Al-Sharq al-Awsat on the condition of anonymity
said that the AU was facing a real problem in providing the necessary funds
for the African peace forces in Somalia.
He said this was a recurrent problem whenever the time comes to pay the
salaries of the soldiers from Burundi and Uganda, adding that this impeded
the task of these forces in preserving peace and restoring security to the
Somali capital.
Uganda's Defense Minister said yesterday in Kampala that his country
cannot abide by its offer to assume full control of the peacekeeping
mission in Somalia because "no one has extended the necessary funds ...
Contrary to the promises made to us, there are no funds to transport the
soldiers or assume peacekeeping in Somalia".
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