http://www.dawn.com/2007/01/06/int7.htm

Peacekeepers and funds sought for Somalia


NAIROBI, Jan 5: An international meeting on Friday called for urgent 
funding for a peacekeeping mission in Somalia which the strife-torn 
African country's president said was desperately needed, but failed to 
set a deployment timeline.

The United Nations, United States, European Union, African Union, Arab 
League and East African states discussed the crisis as the Somali 
government and their Ethiopian allies hunted Islamist leaders that were 
forced out of Mogadishu last month.

US naval forces were also patrolling off the Somali coast to ensure 
Islamists did not flee by sea.

The panel, known as the international contact group on Somalia, 
"emphasized the urgent need for funding to facilitate the deployment of 
a stabilisation force in Somalia based on UN Security Council resolution 
1725," said a statement read by Kenyan Foreign Minister Raphael Tuju.

Previous US and UN peacekeeping forays into Somalia between 1993 and 
1995 ended disastrously.

"It is essential that an inclusive process of political dialogue and 
reconciliation reject violence and extremism - be launched without 
delay," it added. President Abdullahi Yusuf Amed of Somalia called for a 
"speedy deployment" of international troops which he said would be 
crucial to hopes of bringing order.

The UN has called for the deployment of 8,000 peacekeepers and Uganda 
has pledged troops. Other potential contributors include Rwanda, 
Tanzania, South Africa and Nigeria.

The US top diplomat for Africa Jendayi Frazer said Washington would 
release an extra $24 million -- $10 million for development and $14 
million for the force -- bringing the total US pledge to $40 million. 
Other donations have yet to be announced.

"It is very important that the government reach out very broadly (to) 
include moderate elements of the Islamic Courts Union ... It is the 
Somalis to identify who is moderate," she added.

In Brussels, the 27 EU countries urged the government "to turn its 
military victory into a political success, which implies an opening up 
and an inclusive (political) process," a diplomat told AFP, adding that 
inclusion of Islamist moderates would be "a condition for the 
continuation of our aid".

No deployment date has been set, but the force will be designed to help 
the Somali president increase control of his lawless nation, which is 
still splintered along clan lines.

At the contact group meeting, Kenya, which organised the regional 
initiative that brokered the formation of the government, warned of 
renewed anarchy in Somalia if international support was delayed.

"Failure to act immediately will lead to vacuum that would certainly be 
exploited by the warlords and other extremist forces," Tuju said.

In Addis Ababa, Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni and Ethiopian Prime 
Minister Meles Zenawi also called in a joint statement for the 
"immediate deployment" of troops in Somalia.

AU commission chairman Alpha Omar Konare told the two leaders "we need 
to have an immediate response," and added that the African body would 
oversee the whole exercise.

Earlier, this week, Ethiopian troops backing government forces forced 
Islamist fighters out of their final strongholds, after a two-week war, 
and vowed to unify the country, which disintegrated following the 1991 
ouster of dictator Mohamed Siad Barre.

The Islamists last year restored some order by quelling warlords. But 
largely Christian Ethiopia supported the weak two-year-old transitional 
government and said the Islamists were a threat to Ethiopian security---AFP

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