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U.S. condemns Somali
Islamists' war ultimatum
December 14, 2006
The United
States on Thursday condemned as "irresponsible" a
threat by Somalia's Islamist movement to attack
Ethiopian troops backing the Horn of Africa nation's
interim government unless they leave within days.
The defense chief for the Mogadishu-based Islamists
gave the ultimatum on Tuesday. He said Ethiopia has
more than 30,000 troops on Somali soil to bolster the
administration of President Abdullahi Yusuf in Baidoa,
the only town in government control.
But Addis Ababa has scoffed at the war threat, saying
it only has a few hundred trainers with the Somali
government, which is backed by the West in a 14th
attempt since 1991 to restore central rule to the
conflict-riven nation.
"The United States regrets the irresponsible
'ultimatum' issued by the Islamic Courts," U.S.
Embassy spokeswoman Jennifer Barnes said from
Washington's Nairobi mission, which has responsibility
for Kenya and Somalia.
"Given the existing heightened tensions in Somalia,
this ultimatum further destabilizes the situation and
undermines international and regional efforts to
encourage credible dialogue between Somali parties,"
she added.
The Islamists' deadline for Ethiopian withdrawal has
heightened fears of all-out war in Somalia, where
skirmishes have taken place between reconnaissance
teams from government and Islamist troops close to
each other near Baidoa.
The Islamists took Mogadishu in June and have expanded
across south Somalia since then.
AFRICAN PEACEKEEPERS?
Fighters from the religious movement effectively flank
the government on three sides, and rival soldiers are
just a few kilometers (miles) apart at a slim front
line near Baidoa.
Diplomats fear any fighting could quickly spill into a
regional war given that Ethiopia openly supports the
government while its arch-foe Eritrea is accused of
sending arms and fighters to help the Somalia Islamic
Courts Council (SICC).
Foreign nations are urging the Somali rivals to return
to peace talks, which stalled in Khartoum last month.
However a U.N. resolution endorsing an African
peacekeeping mission -- which the government wants,
but the Islamists have sworn to fight -- has made a
quick resumption of talks unlikely.
Washington pushed for the U.N. motion despite European
and analysts' fears that instead of promoting peace, a
foreign force might inflame the situation and draw
jihadists to Somalia.
"You had the bizarre situation where only one country
wanted this resolution, and everyone else disagreed,
but it got through because of who that country is,"
said a Western diplomat.
Washington argues the arrival of a formal African
peacekeeping force to protect the government would
pave the way for an exit of Ethiopian and Eritrean
forces in Somalia.
And the head of the African Union (AU) backed that
view at a regional summit in Kenya, saying
peacekeepers were needed to stop the "rot" in Somalia.
"If we do not do this now, then we must prepare
ourselves for the emergence of ethnic republics and
religious republics in the coming years," he said.
Source: The
Associated Press
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Last updated: 11/12/06.