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Somali
Leader: Peace Talks Not an Option
December 15, 2006
Peace talks with Somalia's Islamic movement are no longer an option, the
president said Friday, warning that the group is allowing al-Qaida terrorists to
'set up shop' in the Horn of Africa.
'This is a new chapter and part of the terror group's plan to wage war against
the West,' Abdullahi Yusuf told The Associated Press during a rare interview at
his heavily guarded office in western Somalia.
Tension has mounted in recent weeks between Somalia's government, which has
international recognition but little authority, and the Council of Islamic
Courts, which controls most of southern Somalia. The United States has said the
Islamic movement has links to al-Qaida; Islamic leaders have repeatedly denied
it.
'We do not give protection to these criminals,' Islamic courts spokesman
Abdirahin Ali Mudey said.
Somalia has not had an effective government since warlords overthrew dictator
Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991, plunging the country into anarchy. The government
was formed in 2004 with the help of the United Nations, but it has struggled to
assert its authority.
The Islamic courts movement has vowed to launch a holy war starting Tuesday
unless Ethiopian troops supporting the government leave Somalia. Ethiopia, a
largely Christian nation, fears the emergence of a neighboring Islamic state and
has acknowledged sending military advisers _ though not a fighting force _ to
help the government.
Experts fear the conflict could engulf the already volatile Horn of Africa. A
recent U.N. report said 10 nations have been sending weapons to the warring
sides in Somalia.
War would hit an already devastated country where one in five children die
before age 5 from preventable diseases. The impoverished nation also is
struggling to recover from the worst flood season in East Africa in 50 years.
'The fighting can happen at any time now,' Yusuf said, adding that peace talks
were impossible now that the Islamic leaders have declared war on his
government. The sides have held several rounds of talks in Khartoum, Sudan, but
have failed to produce any lasting effect.
'They are the ones who effectively closed the door to peace talks and they are
the ones who are waging the war,' Yusuf said of the Islamic council, noting that
his administration would not attack first. Baidoa, the only town the government
controls, is surrounded by fighters loyal to the Islamic group.
'We are not under the illusion that peace is possible,' Yusuf said.
In September, Yusuf survived a suicide car bomb attack _ the first of its kind
in Somalia _ that killed his younger brother. The president blamed al-Qaida and
said it only strengthened his resolve to defeat Islamic extremism.
Late Friday, an explosion rocked the capital, Mogadishu, which is controlled by
the Islamic courts, but the cause was not immediately known. Sheik Muqtar Robow,
the Islamic group's deputy defense chief, said nobody was injured but his forces
had sealed off the area and were investigating.
More than 100 government troops defected to the Islamic courts in the capital on
Friday.
'We could not bear the extreme conditions we were living in,' said Farhan Abshir
Malin. 'Ethiopian troops have been harassing us. Now we are ready to fight side
by side with Islamic courts.'
Sheik Muqtar Robow, deputy defense chief for the Islamic group, said it was his
pleasure to 'welcome our brothers who have repented after being misled.'
Meanwhile, Islamic leaders in Mogadishu distributed sermons about holy war to be
read at the city's mosques _ the latest attempt to galvanize the nation as it
slides toward war.
'The sermon concerns the holy war on Ethiopian troops inside Somalia,' Islamic
official Sheik Hussein Abdullahi Barre told the AP.
The sermon, which was written in Arabic, said 'infidels want to put out the
light of Allah by trying to force us to follow their way, democracy ... Oh God
give pride to Muslims and humiliate the enemies of your religion.'
The president said his government was the only legitimate authority in Somalia.
'It is totally misguided not to accept the government, he said, adding: 'The
alternative is chaos.'
Source: The Associated Press
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Last updated: 11/12/06.