Friday, January 26, 2007

AU AFRICAN TROOPS PLEA FOR SOMALIA !

Ethiopian troops have begun to leave Somalia. African Union (AU) chief Alpha Oumar Konare has appealed to countries across the continent to help get troops deployed to Somalia.
He said troops, funding and other resources like aircraft were needed to ensure peacekeepers could be deployed soon to avert a tragedy.
An AU force is due to replace Ethiopian troops, who helped Somalia's government oust Islamists forces.
Mr Konare was speaking in Ethiopia ahead of next week's AU summit there.
In the Somali capital, Mogadishu, there were more mortar attacks overnight, leaving at least two people wounded.
There have been several such attacks since the Union of Islamic Courts (UIC) was driven out of the capital.
Some UIC leaders have said they would stage a guerrilla war and it is believed that some 3,000 Islamist fighters remain in Mogadishu.
Warning
The BBC's Amber Henshaw in Addis Ababa says all eyes will be on the Ethiopian capital over the next few days as Africa's heads of state prepare to gather for the full summit which starts on Monday.

POSSIBLE PEACEKEEPERS
Nine battalions proposed - up to 9,000 troops:
Uganda: 1,500 troops offered, subject to parliamentary approval
Malawi: Up to 1,000 troops offered
Nigeria: 1,000 troops offered
Ghana: Reportedly offered troops
Tanzania: Considering
Rwanda: Considering

South Africa: Considering but forces stretched. At the summit's opening ceremony, Mr Konare said the AU should look to member states and not just to the international community to help get peacekeepers into Somalia.
He welcomed the start of the withdrawal of Ethiopian troops but warned if peacekeepers were not deployed soon the situation on the ground could deteriorate.
Mr Konare said he feared a tragedy could unfold in Somalia without rapid intervention.
He said Nigeria, Uganda, Ghana and Malawi had now offered to send peacekeeping troops.
Among other issues on the summit agenda is a renewed bid by Sudan's President, Omar al-Bashir, to chair the AU.
Last year he withdrew his candidacy after pressure from those - including the US - who said it was a contradiction for him to be president of the AU while its peacekeepers were in Sudan to protect Darfur's citizens from their own government.
Borders closed
On Thursday, an Ethiopian soldier was killed and another seriously wounded after unknown gunmen opened fire on troops at a market in Kismayo, southern Somalia.
In neighbouring Kenya, one of the main UIC financial backers faces being sent back there after pleading guilty to illegally entering the country.
A lawyer for Abubakar Omar Aden, a 72-year old businessman, who once controlled Somalia's El Maan port, said his life would be in danger if he was deported.
One of the UIC leaders, Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed, is also in Kenya, where he has held secret talks with US ambassador Michael Ranneberger.
Since the Islamists were removed from power in Mogadishu, Kenya has closed its borders and deported dozens of Somalis who fled into the country.
BBC NEWS REPORT.

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