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Somalia: Preparations for the London Conference
The London
Conference on Somalia is being held on Thursday next week, February
23rd. Chaired by UK Prime Minister, David Cameron, over
fifty delegations are expected. In addition to members of the
international community and frontline states, there will be
representatives from the TFIs, of the Puntland and Galmudug
administrations, of Ahlu Sunna wal Jama’a, and from Somaliland.
Last week, the UK
Foreign Secretary, William Hague, following his own visit to
Mogadishu, laid out the UK’s aims for the Conference including the
need for a better international strategy to address Somalia’s
problems and help its people. He described a more stable Somalia as
vital to the UK’s national security, essential for the stability for
the Horn of Africa and long overdue. He mentioned terrorism and
piracy and the importance of trying “to change the dynamic from one
of inexorable decline to an upwards trajectory of gradually
increasing stability and security.” He outlined why he felt the
time was ripe for a major effort. One reason was the improved
security situation in Mogadishu; another was the need to intensify
the pressure on Al-Shabaab and also build on the progress made in
diminishing pirate activity; and thirdly with the expiry of the TFG
mandate in August there was an opportunity to create a broader and
more representative political arrangement.
Mr. Hague has made
it clear he hopes the Conference will agree practical measures in a
number of different areas. These include an expanded political
process; regular and sustainable funding for AMISOM forces; a
coordinated international package of support for Somali regions to
complement peace and stability at the national level; concerted
efforts to break the piracy business cycle; agree the areas to
develop to disrupt terrorism across the region including stopping
movement of terrorists and disrupting their finances as well as
delivering effective intelligence gathering; and highlight the need
for generous humanitarian responses. He also stressed that he wanted
the Conference to be the start of a process not the end and to agree
on how to handle Somali issues in the future with a revitalized
International Contract group and more countries deploying diplomats
and staff into Somalia. Somalia’s Prime Minister Abdiweli said in an
interview with AFP earlier this week that Somalia hoped for a lot
from this conference: “We expect the establishment of a trust fund
for Somalia. We expect a complete reconstruction plan for Somalia.
We expect a Marshall Plan for Somalia.”
The second
consultative meeting of the core group for the Conference met last
Friday, February 10th, at Lancaster House in London.
Representatives from the African Union, Ethiopia, the European
Union, France, Italy, Kenya, Norway, Qatar, Sweden, Turkey, Uganda,
the United Kingdom, the United Arab Emirates, the United Nations and
the United States considered the proposed draft communiqué. It
contains several sections, in addition to an introduction and a
conclusion, covering the humanitarian situation, the political
process, security and justice, piracy, counter-terrorism, stability
and recovery, the diaspora and international coordination.
Delegates discussed
the draft communiqué paragraph-by-paragraph with particular emphasis
on the political process during the post-transition period after
August. Among the points raised were the need to
create united international support; for accountability and
transparency in the administration of funds; for Somalis to assume a
central role in the peace process; enhanced international efforts to
assist the speedy implementation of the political process; a call
for the Istanbul Conference in June to come up with concrete
proposals on the humanitarian situation; the need to deal with
corruption and to take strong action against individuals and
institutions bent on derailing the political process.
Participants at the consultative meeting also stressed the
Conference was about crystallizing the existing Djibouti process,
not creating a new initiative. They took note of the importance of
providing access to print and electronic media to allow moderate
elements to reach out to the Somali public. They emphasised the
pivotal role of IGAD and the frontline states on political and
security consolidation in Somalia as well as the importance of
longer term development programmes with regional impact.They
stressed the need to address the genesis of piracy and take a
comprehensive course of action on land and at sea. They raised the
importance of tailor-made training and capacity building programmes
to enhance the TFIs. They emphasised the need to understand clearly
the impact of terrorism and all its manifestations in Somalia, in
the region and for the international community at large. They
expressed their view on
affirming the territorial integrity of Somalia and on the system of
government and the constitution of Somalia after the TFG. The
meeting also discussed the expected conclusions of the conference
and what the conference might deliver. It considered possible
annexes and identified countries and organisations to make keynote
speeches.
The Ethiopian delegation led by Ethiopia’s Ambassador to the UK,
Ambassador Berhanu Kebede, reflected the position of IGAD as well as
Ethiopia at the meeting. It
underlined the need to take strong concerted action against
Al-Shabaab, now openly affiliated to Al Qaeda and stressed the key
role to be played by frontline states, IGAD and
the AU in the political and
security process.
It emphasised the need
to support the authorization of additional AMISOM troops and the
expeditious delivery of all required equipment, force enablers and
multipliers, as well as give due credit to forces of local
administrations, Ahlu Sunna and neighbouring countries. It suggested
putting in place an incentive package for those who accept the
Djibouti Agreement, the Kampala Accord, the Roadmap and the Garowe
Principles, and taking strong measures against those trying to
derail the peace effort and called on the Istanbul Conference in
June to produce strong proposals in this regard.
The Ethiopian
delegation also underlined the need to enhance international efforts
to stop illegal inflows of small arms and light weapons into
Somalia, calling on the UN Security Council to take concrete action
against those involved. It emphasized the importance of supporting
Somalia to build and develop strong
institutions of governance and human rights accountable to the
Somali parliament. It underlined the need to make training coherent
and well-coordinated and for it to be demand driven and provided
inside Somalia so it can respond to the reality on the ground. It
noted the problems faced by neighbouring countries in hosting
refugees from Somalia, and stressed that winning the hearts and
minds of the people of Somalia was critical for the fight against
terrorism.
…..moves for a UN Security Council vote to enlarge
AMISOM
The sponsors of a UN Security Council Resolution to increase the
numbers of AMISOM to 17,731 troops and increase support for
equipment and logistics are trying to prepare a vote-ready text by
the end of the week with the aim of getting a vote for an
authorization of the increase by Wednesday, the day before the
London Conference. Increasing military pressure on Al-Shabaab is a
key element of the overall political strategy likely to be endorsed
by the London Conference. Authorization of an increase in the size
of AMISOM will also involve the transfer of the Kenyan forces,
‘rehatting’ them, as part of AMISOM. It will also cover additional
units from Djibouti and Sierra Leone.
Last weekend, AMISOM announced that it intended to move out of
Mogadishu and expand its control to Afgoye, 30 kilometers west of
the capital and a strategic center for Al-Shabaab where the roads
from Kismayo and Baidoa to Mogadishu meet. It is also an area which
provides much of the fruit and vegetables for the capital. At the
beginning of the week, TFG commander, General Abdikarim Yusuf Aden
called on inhabitants of Afgoye to leave the town to avoid civilian
casualties. Since then, AMISOM and TFG forces have successfully
begun to advance towards Afgoye, setting up new army bases on the
outskirts of Mogadishu, taking over an Al-Shabaab checkpoint at
Ex-control Afgoye and defeating attempts to retake it. According to
Somalia’s Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Defence, Hussein
Arab Isse, this is the start of massive operations against
Al-Shabaab and “from now we are ready to liberate the rest of the
regions of the country from the enemy.”
On Monday, TFG officials again called on the UN Security Council to
lift the arms embargo on Somalia. Hussein Arab Isse said the
government had requested the immediate removal of the embargo
following the announcement that Al-Shabaab and Al Qaeda had joined
forces. “We want to fight Al-Shabaab and wipe them out of the
region”. The Defence Minister added that the TFG “wants to buy our
own tanks and modern weapons to crush Al-Shabaab…to facilitate our
security and rebuilds our ability to fight the insurgent group.”
… ICG report on Kenya’s intervention
On Wednesday, the Brussels-based International Crisis Group released
a report on Kenya’s military intervention in Somalia in October last
year which it calls “the biggest security gamble Kenya has taken
since independence”. It emphasizes that Kenya must act cautiously
and avoid a prolonged “occupation” in case it turns local opinion
against it and galvanizes opposition which Al-Shabaab could exploit.
The report questions whether the operation was given the go-ahead
with adequate political, diplomatic and military preparation. The
report looks at the background to the decision including the
pressures from the Somali refugee problem in Kenya, Kenya’s
“Jubaland project” and the threat to tourism. It also lists the
challenges that the intervention faces: Al-Shabaab’s tactics and
operations, the need to protect its supply lines and to win hearts
and minds, the possible problems of urban conflict in Kismayo and
other towns, and the terrorist threat to Kenya. It notes that
Kenya’s move was motivated in part to inoculate Kenya’s North
Eastern province from the situation across the border, to ease the
huge refugee problem and to curtail the activities and influence of
Al-Shabaab. However, it warns that there might be unintended
consequences, and the operation could reopen old wounds, cause new
inter-clan discord, radicalize some elements in Kenya and undermine
recent economic and political developments.
The report suggests Al-Shabaab intends to try and destabilise North
Eastern province and wage a low intensity guerrilla campaign. Kenya
will therefore need to ensure there is a settlement in southern
Somalia in order to provide stability for its own border areas. This
means not only defeating Al-Shabaab but for Kenya and its partners
to develop a political plan that provides incentives for local clans
to work together in the region. It will need careful planning and
support and continued international involvement in development and
capacity-building, and a body to control the resources of Kismayo, a
perennial source of conflict, equitably. “Unless this occurs, there
is little chance for long-term peace in the Juba Valley”. For
Kismayo, the ICG suggests a transparent mechanism to assume
responsibility for revenue collection for 5-10 years with an
oversight board of mixed international and Somali membership but
controlled by the former and supported by experts and international
customs officers, to ensure revenues are used to develop all of
Lower and Middle Juba and Gedo. More plausibly, the ICG also
suggests that the Kenyan Government should articulate its aims and
goals and outline its exit strategy clearly, and ensure that any
offensive operations, either independent or as part of AMISOM, are
accompanied by a political strategy to win local clan support.
…and the UN’s Garowe constitutional conference, part II
On Wednesday, the
second phase of the UN organized Constitutional Conference opened in
Garowe, Puntland, to continue discussions on issues relating to the
principles of the Roadmap, particularly Somalia’s future
constitution and federalism. More than 180 delegates attended the
opening session, including President Sheikh Sharif, Prime Minister
Abdiweli Mohamed Ali and the Special Representative of the UN
Secretary-General, Ambassador Mahiga. Representatives of the UN, the
AU, IGAD and of Djibouti and international aid agencies were also
present as well as ministers, representatives of the TFIs and of
other administrations and organizations including Galmudug and Ahlu
Sunna wal Jama’a. Also present were President Abdirahman Muhammed
‘Farole’ and Vice-President Abdisamad Ali Shire of Puntland. Garowe
is, of course, the capital of Puntland. Also present is Sharif
Hassan, still recognized as the Speaker of the Transitional Federal
Parliament by the UN Political Office and by the international
community, despite his ‘replacement’ in December by Madobe Nunow
Mohamed. Despite appeals to settle the dispute, the dissident
parliamentarians also held a meeting on Wednesday in Mogadishu. 268
MPs made clear their opposition to the Garowe Conference, claiming
that it was only designed to benefit the interests of a few
individuals, particularly Sharif Hassan rather than Somalia, and was
not in accordance with the law. A major element in the discussion
over the constitution revolves around proposals to sharply limit the
number of MPs, at the moment numbering 550. Sharif Hassan himself
said during the opening ceremonies of the conference that everyone
had come “to agree on the constitution which will be used to govern
the country”. He urged conflicting sides to think about how to
reduce arguments and misunderstandings and resolve issues through
reconciliation. Prime Minister Abdiweli said there was need to move
from the reconciliation period to a fair government to reach across
the country. A federal administration was, he said, a very important
element in reaching the TFG’s goals.
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Sudan and South Sudan’s MOU on Non-Aggression and Cooperation
On Friday last week
the Joint Political and Security Mechanism (JPSM) Committee met in
Addis Ababa to sign a Memorandum of Understanding on Non-Aggression
and Cooperation under which Sudan and South Sudan agreed to respect
each other’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, accept the
principle of non-interference in the internal affairs of each other
and reject the use of force. They also committed themselves to the
principles of equality and mutual benefit and peaceful co-existence
and recalled their previously agreed commitment to the principle of
promoting the mutual viability of the two states and the maintenance
of a secure Sudan and a secure South Sudan. The two parties also
agreed not to support political parties, political actors or
opposition armed groups and movements within the other state. Each
promised to refrain from carrying out military acts and espionage
activities against the other. In rejecting force, both parties
agreed to resolve their differences through peaceful means and
refrain from any bombardment of each other’s territory or conduct
over-flights into the airspace of the other. Neither would they
allow their territory to be used by any other state, armed group or
movement to conduct any act of aggression or to undertake any
military activity against the territory of the other. They further
agreed to conduct their relations and to cooperate on the bases of
equality and the promotion of mutual benefit as well as maintain
diplomatic relations to ensure peace, stability and security and
joint mechanisms to foster cooperation in various areas.
UN
Secretary-General, Ban ki-Moon, welcomed the agreement and urged
both countries to maintain the positive spirit the agreement
demonstrated and to abide by its provisions. However within a couple
of days, South Sudan was accusing Sudan of bombing a border town;
Sudan claimed the operation involved an attack on rebels inside
Sudan not in South Sudan.
In his statement,
the UN Secretary-General also expressed concern over the lack of
progress to resolve post-independence issues including oil. While
the Abyei Joint Oversight Committee (AJOC) has agreed on several
areas such as the return of IDPs and movement of nomads as well as
support for UNISFA to continue its engagement with the various
communities and follow up the implementation of the AJOC decisions
on the ground, many other issues remain to be discussed between the
two sides. These include the matter of the displaced population in
Abyei and the continued escalation of tension. The two parties also
need further negotiations on other security related issues including
the question of a “soft border”, nationality and legal matters.
Most immediately at
issue is the still unresolved matter of oil over which tension
continues to rise after South Sudan’s shutdown of production last
month, and Sudan’s continued insistence on high transit fees. No
progress was made in this despite the MOU on Non Aggression and
Cooperation, and South Sudan accused Sudan of seizing an additional
2.4 million barrels of oil shipments at the beginning of the week.
Last month, it accused Sudan of stealing $815 million worth of oil.
Sudan said it had confiscated some oil to recover unpaid transit
fees. The two sides remain far apart in their offers and over
whether South Sudan should pay transport, processing and terminal
fees which South Sudan says are already paid to contractors. The
effects of the impasse will certainly have major ramifications on
the economies of both states especially South Sudan where oil
revenues account for over ninety five percent of the budget.
Other economic
aspects including currency, banking relations and regulations, trade
and the division of assets and liabilities including water still
have to be addressed in the economic negotiations between the two
parties. Another major concern where time is running out is the
April 8th deadline for the half a million South Sudanese
in Sudan to choose to return to South Sudan or decide to stay in
Sudan where they will have to regularize their status. One hundred
and twenty thousand South Sudanese have registered with the UNHCR to
leave Sudan but the International Organization for Migration fears
the logistics of moving these numbers in the time available, let
alone half a million, is impossible.
President Obama’s
Special Envoy to Sudan, Ambassador Princeton Lyman joined the talks
on Monday. China has also been trying to help bridge the
differences. On Wednesday, the AU Peace and Security Council
appealed to both sides to remain committed to the negotiations on
oil with a view to reaching a “fair agreement”. The Council stressed
the AU’s “deep concern at the unilateral actions taken by both
states in regard to the issue of oil and petroleum matters”, and it
appealed to the international community and the UN Security Council
for support to facilitate resolution of the outstanding matters of
post-secession issues between the two states. Indeed, the role of
IGAD, AUHIP and the International Community must be to exert maximum
efforts to try to moderate the tensions between the two sides and
alleviate the outstanding post-independent issues.
The talks ended on
Wednesday this week with no progress on oil, but both sides have
agreed to further discussions next week. It will be imperative that
they then actually talk to each other rather than merely continue to
talk at one another as they did this week.
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Clashes
in northern Kenya displace thousands across the border
Towards the end of
last year, several weeks of fighting between the Gabra and Borana
pastoralist communities living in northern Kenya led to the death of
at least 15 people, the displacement of several thousand more, and
the disruption of transport in the area around the town of Moyale.
The fighting was apparently triggered by attempts to seize a grazing
area. Police reservists in the area were also accused of using their
weapons in support of their communities and over 170 of them were
subsequently disarmed after Internal Security Minister, George
Saitoti, said some had been behaving in a partisan manner. Extra
police were drafted into the area in December but there was another
wave of fighting at the beginning of the year after clashes broke
out between youths attending a peace meeting. Several people were
killed and dozens of houses burnt in several villages near Moyale.
According to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs in Nairobi at least 46 people had died by the end of the
first week in January. There was a brief pause in the fighting and
then further clashes broke out in mid January. The continuing
insecurity has meant that it has been impossible to collect accurate
figures but by early February the Kenyan Red Cross estimated that
some 9,500 families, nearly 60,000 people had been displaced, with
over 60 killed and more than a thousand houses burnt, with crops and
livestock as well as property being destroyed. The worst affected
areas were the settlements of Heilu, Kinisa, Buthye, Bori, Mansile,
Illadu, Manyatta and Odda. Education was also badly affected in
Moyale with over half of the area’s 31 schools failing to reopen
after the holidays.
Thousands of those
affected by the clashes fled across the border into Ethiopia, and
the numbers are now estimated at just under 30,000. Half of these
people originally fled to Ethiopia earlier but had returned when the
fighting had died down in January. Now they are back again, and
according to a verification exercise conducted by the Disaster Risk
Management and Food Security Sector and local authorities with
assistance from the International Organization for Migration there
are approximately 17,000 in Moyale woreda, Borena zone in the Oromia
Regional State and another 11,000 in the Somali Regional State in
Moyale woreda, Liben zone. Many of these are living with host
families, but food, plastic sheets and household items have been
sent to the area and are being distributed to the refugees.
While it appeared
the main motivation for the violence was competition over land for
grazing and livestock following last year’s drought in which the
pastoralist communities lost large numbers of livestock due to lack
of pasture and the drying up of water sources, the conflicts have
also been linked to politics and to the upcoming general election in
Kenya, expected later in the year. Kenya’s National Cohesion and
Integration Commission said the conflicts “must be treated as
electoral related and not dismissed as conflict over water, pasture
and cattle rustling”. The Kenyan Red Cross also claimed the “trigger
of the current conflict is allegedly competition over positions in
the county government structures as designated in the new
constitution and land-related issues.” This has apparently been the
cause of similar inter-community violence in the neighboring region
of Isiolo where there was an outbreak of violence in December
between the Turkana and Somali communities. Several people died and
several thousand more were displaced in three days of clashes. This
week there was another series of clashes with reports claiming that
“dozens” had died. One official was quoted as calling Isiolo “a war
zone”.
This fighting between the Borana and Gabra is the first since the
peace reached between the two communities in Ethiopia and in Kenya
at the long series of meetings between elders held between 2004 and
2009 and finalized at Dukana, Maikona and Walda in mid 2009. Now,
together with increased security in the area, the elders from both
communities are making renewed efforts to re-establish peace. The
Chairman of the Borana Council of Elders has said that the
government should spearhead peace initiates but these must allow the
crafting of home grown solutions: “local mechanisms need to be
employed to solve the problems and local leaders must be involved in
the process.” Local administrations and elders on both sides of the
border are making renewed efforts to bring about peace between the
two communities which straddle the border.
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International Partnerships in Higher Education
Conference
A three day International Partnership in Higher Education Conference
was convened in Addis Ababa this week under the theme of “Higher
Education for Development”. The Conference organized by USAID and
HED, and co-sponsored by Addis Ababa University and the Ethiopian
Ministry of Education, was held to help to enable the higher
learning institutions of Africa and America to work in partnership
for education development. Participants included representatives of
universities together with African, U.S and European higher
education associations, the African Capacity Building Foundation,
the World Bank, UNESCO, RUFORUM and African Union Commission. Also
attending were Dr. Gebissa Ejeta, President Obama's Science Envoy,
and US Ambassador to Ethiopia, Donald Booth.
The Conference was opened by the Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign
Minister, Hailemariam Desalegn, who noted that the number and
diversity of institutions and development partners present
demonstrated both the desire and the commitment of governments and
the international community, particularly the higher education
communities of the U.S and Africa, to solve the societal, national
and regional challenges of development. The Deputy Prime Minister
acknowledged the US government’s continued interest in Africa and
its support to development. He said that the globalized and
knowledge-based world of today necessitated the need for greater
cooperation and collaboration to alleviate poverty, build national
institutional and human capacity, ensure peace and stability,
improve governance and establish democratic institutions.
The Deputy Prime Minister said Ethiopia was committed to working
with the U.S. government and universities to build up its
institutional capacities through such efforts as the Feed the Future
Initiative, the Global Health and Climate Change and Adaptation
programs, the U.S.- India-Africa trilateral higher education
capacity development program, the recently launched USAID Higher
Education Engagement program and similar initiatives. He believed
such initiatives and programs would have a far-reaching contribution
for Africa's transformation and development. However, collaboration
between U.S. and African higher education institutions would have
meaningful impact only if they were focused on addressing the
challenges and problems that had been prioritized by national
governments and local people; that were based on mutual agreements
and benefits; that were owned and led by Africans; and were designed
for long term and sustainable engagement. He noted that Africa-U.S.
Higher Education Initiative partnerships had detailed five-year and
ten-year perspectives, and said investing in such plans would help
institutions transcend the boundaries between research, education,
community services and development policies. He also underlined the
critical role the African Diaspora could play in any partnership and
engagement and in the implementation of these programs.
Deputy Prime Minister Hailemariam said Africans were striving to
make the 21st century the “century of Africa's
renaissance”. The first decade of the century had demonstrated that
Africa could achieve significant development in improving its
economy, the livelihood of its populations and its competitiveness.
The role of higher education in realizing the continent’s vision of
progress was critical. The current higher education enrolment rate
for Sub-Saharan Africa was estimated to be around 6%, compared to
the global average of 26%. With increased graduation from primary
and secondary levels, there was a need to expand vocational and
tertiary education. Other problems facing African higher education
institutions included developing and retaining faculty, ensuring
attractive work environments and support for research through
post-graduate level programs. Institutional good governance and
management were also crucial and there was a real need of more
capacity development in these areas.
Many African governments had put higher education development and
reform at the forefront of their development priorities. The
Government of Ethiopia currently invested about 18% of its education
budget in higher education expansion and reform. The Deputy Prime
Minister said it had increased the number of universities in the
country from 2 in 1996 to over 30 today, and the student population
had increased from around 40,000 to over half a million. There had
been a focus on improving the quality and relevance of learning and
research. Ethiopia recognized that nothing could explain more
clearly its commitment to democracy than these efforts to expand
education throughout the country. The thirty-two higher learning
institutions and the dozens more training institutes in Ethiopia
today were microcosms of a democratic society in the making.
Ethiopia's renaissance could not be achieved without the expansion
of education. Education was an instrument to put in place a
democratic political order which could accommodate diversity and
allow peoples of all backgrounds, whether religious or ethnic, to
exercise the fullest measure of democratic and self-government
rights.
Deputy Prime Minister Hailemariam noted that despite the progress in
expanding higher education the Government still needed to forge
viable partnerships to enhance the competitiveness of the country’s
higher learning institutions, build the capacity of its academic
personnel, and of its graduates. The Government believed it could
and should learn from the experience of other institutions in the
world and Ethiopia’s higher learning institutions were therefore
keen to have partnerships with institutions elsewhere. These would
allow them to tap into the wealth of knowledge and scientific
expertise that more developed universities had achieved. The
Government was keen to create viable potential for centers of
excellence in the country: for basic and applied sciences and
technology at Addis Ababa University; in agriculture, food security
and environment at Haramaya, Hawasa and Mekelle universities; in
medicine and community-based health sciences at Jimma and Gonder;
and in water resources development and engineering at Bahr Dar and
Arba Minch universities. He noted that Haramaya and Jimma
Universities had been established through collaborative partnerships
and support from the U.S government over many years.
This was not just the case for Ethiopia. The Deputy Premier
expressed his belief that these partnerships could work closely with
national governments and regional entities like the Association of
African Universities and African Union Commission, as well as with
private sector foundations and local and international stakeholders.
Regional centers of excellence could also serve as springboards for
regional cooperation, elevating Africa's competitiveness. He quoted
the examples of environment and engineering at 2iE in Burkina Faso;
of solar power at the University of Cape Town; of veterinary and
trans-boundary diseases at Makerere University; of dryland
agriculture at the University of Nairobi; and of water resources
management and engineering at Addis Ababa University. These, he
added, could also be used as stepping stones by the African Union in
its recently launched Pan African University initiative. These and
other complementary partnerships, with U.S. institutions as well as
with other countries including India, China, Brazil, Japan, the
U.K., France and other European would assist Africa to develop the
next generation of leaders and professionals, entrepreneurs,
teachers and researchers and truly make the 21st century
the century of Africa's Renaissance.
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News and Views
A change of UK policy towards Eritrea?
Eritrea’s Foreign Minister, Osman Saleh, and special political
advisor to the President, Yemane Ghebreab, visited the UK Foreign
and Commonwealth Office for the first time last week at the
invitation of the UK Government. Analysts in the UK described the
visit as a possible shift in UK policy. Eritrea is currently under
UN sanctions for its role in destabilization in the Horn of Africa,
its support for Al-Shabaab and for its refusal to respond to UN
Security Council resolutions 1844 and 1907. Yemane Ghebreab, of
course, was described as an “extraordinary threat” to US national
security in a presidential order signed by President Obama in April
2010. The Eritrean officials met with the UK’s Minister of State for
Africa, Henry Bellingham, and other senior officials of the Foreign
and Commonwealth Office, and with the Secretary of State for
International Development, Andrew Mitchell. A range of bilateral and
regional issues were discussed including regional security and
stability, and migration and piracy. Mr. Bellingham underlined the
importance that the UK attaches to improvements to human rights
including religious and press freedom in Eritrea and the case of the
G-11 ministers and officials arrested in September 2001 and held
incommunicado without charge or trial ever since. Several are
believed to have died in detention. Last month, Eritrea was ranked
last for the fifth year running in the Reporters Without Borders
press freedom index with at least 34 journalists in prison,
including some held in solitary confinement since September 2001. A
number of rights groups including Reporters Without Borders have
continued to campaign for them. Those detained include the Swedish
journalist, Dawit Isaac the subject of a Habeas Corpus petition sent
to the Supreme Court in Asmara in July 2011 requesting Dawit's
immediate appearance in court under Eritrea's constitutional and
criminal code provisions and international obligations. Eritrea, of
course, does not have a constitution. The court has so far refused
to acknowledge receipt of the petition. Efforts were also made in
the UK by the London-based human rights NGO, Redress, by Reporters
Without Borders and by the Eritrean human rights campaigner, Elsa
Chyrum, to bring Naizghi Kiflu, a former head of security and
information minister at the time of the September 2001 crackdown, to
trial for his responsibility for torture of detainees. Naizghi,
subsequently an adviser to President Isaias, died in the UK on
February 6th after a long illness.
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Women’s Leadership for Peace and Security in the Horn
Women from eight African countries have held a five day meeting in
Hargeisa, the capital of Somaliland, on the theme of "Women's
Leadership for Peace and Security in the Greater Horn of Africa".
The Conference brought together forty leaders, the G40, from Sudan
and South Sudan, Djibouti, Kenya, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Somalia and
Somaliland. Their objective is the adoption of an action plan to
enhance the status and role of women in the region. Supported by the
Club of Madrid, an independent non-profit organization of leaders
from more than fifty countries, the G40 discussed crisis prevention,
democracy, security, development and leadership. Opening the
conference, Somaliland’s First Lady, Amina Sheikh Mohamed Waris
called for concrete action against all forms of discrimination
against women. In her keynote speech, she noted that Somaliland was
a stable, peaceful and democratic nation that provided opportunities
for women despite two decades of non-recognition. It had three women
in Parliament, two in key ministerial positions, one deputy
minister, and one mayor. The number of women in decision making
positions might seem minor compared to other countries but it was a
significant achievement for Somaliland’s women, and the current
Somaliland government was determined to make women’s rights, as
enshrined in the constitution, a reality. The Hargeisa meeting
follows earlier G40 group meetings in Addis Ababa, Nairobi, Kampala
and Djibouti also funded by the Club of Madrid, whose leadership
includes Kjell Magne Bondevik from Norway, Mary Robinson from
Ireland, Valdis Birkavs (Latvia) and Kim Campbell (Canada). Members
of the G40 have been involved in participation in Sudan’s 2010
parliamentary elections, assessment of the Somali’s Constitutional
Committee during the drafting process and in the preparation of
Somaliland’s last elections. Discussing women’s issues and
increasing women’s participation in society “from the grassroots up”
is the main agenda of the G40.
******
About 9.5 million people still face famine in the Horn
of Africa says Jerry Rawlings
The African Union’s High Representative for Somalia, former
President Jerry Rawlings, said a total of 9.5 million people still
face the threat of famine in the Horn of Africa with 2.3 million of
them in Somalia alone. Although the United Nations has downgraded
the status of Somalia from famine to crisis, the country is still at
risk of renewed famine if humanitarian aid is cut. He said
humanitarian assistance amounting to $1.5 billion was required to
ensure that Somalia would not return to a state of famine. Speaking
on the topic of “Somalia, the Horn of Africa and Food Security” in
Abu Dhabi last weekend, the AU High Representative said conflict had
impacted negatively on food security in Somalia. However, he also
expressed confidence that recent successes by AMISOM and the TFG in
liberating Mogadishu and other areas would help put in place
measures to enhance food security. His warning comes at a time when
there is a possible threat of the climatic conditions linked to the
drought last year persisting. According to the latest report of the
Famine Early Warning Systems Network, the western Pacific is
currently exhibiting a sea temperature and rainfall pattern similar
to patterns experienced during the drought years of 1984, 2000,
2004, 2007, 2008, 2009, and 2011. The analysis suggests that if
these conditions persist, eastern Kenya, southern Somalia, and
southeastern Ethiopia may experience dry conditions again this year.
Early warning officials note that various local factors would come
in to play when looking for a detailed and more accurate effect
regionally, and stress that the Indian Ocean has the most
determinant impact on rainfall patterns in the Horn. The Greater
Horn of Africa Climate Outlook Forum, which monitors local
conditions, will be meeting February 27th–29th
in Rwanda and its findings should provide greater forecast clarity.
******
Puntland moves against piracy
According to
reports from Puntland, pirates who have been waiting for the monsoon
waves and winds of the ‘Wajiilo’ season to die down expect to start
operations again in the next week or so. Although pirate activity
has not been halted during the last three months, it has been
curtailed and pirates expect to intensify activities as soon as the
maritime conditions moderate. Preparations are said to be being made
in the small ports all along the coast from Harfun to Harardhere and
the “investors” who finance these operations are expected back in
the next few weeks. In the meantime, Puntland authorities have been
increasing their efforts to clamp down on piratical activity. The
Puntland Minister of Security, General Khalif Issa Mudan, announced
on Monday that 11 pirates had been arrested near Eyl and a speedboat
burnt. The Puntland government is planning to set up bases for its
maritime police force at a number of ports from which pirates are
said to operate including Eyl, Garacad, Bayla and Bargal.
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