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Somalia: Puntland accuses Al-Shabaab of causing insecurity
Puntland’s Minister for Security, Yusuf Ahmad Khayr, has accused Al-Shabaab of responsibility for a recent wave of explosions and killings, some targeted at security forces and prominent elders in Galkacyo town. The minister said the Islamists of Al-Shabaab were involved in these acts and the administration would take all possible measures to curb insecurity in Galkacyo and other towns. He added that the government had arrested a number of those involved and they were being interrogated. It would continue to crack down on those trying to destabilize the region, and he asked the local population especially in Galkacyo to cooperate with police in countering these activities. The minister’s statement comes at a time when people in Puntland have been expressing serious concerns over a number of assassinations and attempted killings, targeting influential people in Galkacyo and Bossaso.
Meanwhile, Ahlu Sunna wal Jama'a fighters said they are planning to extend operations against areas of Gedo and Bay regions still controlled by Al-Shabaab. Sheikh Muhammad Husayn Al-Qadi, the spokesman of Ahlu Sunna said its forces were heading to Garbaharey, Bardhere, and Yurkud districts in Gedo and Bay regions in response to the pleas of civilians suffering under Al-Shabaab control. Ahlu Sunna, which has been carrying out successful operations against Al-Shabaab in Gedo Region, has said that it will drive out Al-Shabaab from the whole region. It says Al-Shabaab is causing the people of the region unbearable suffering, while misinterpreting the traditional Sufi culture of Somalia and Islam. Heavy fighting broke out on Wednesday between pro-government Ahlu Sunna wal Jama'a forces and Al-Shabaab units at Tula Barwaqo, 20 km from Garbaharey. Ahlu Sunna’s spokesperson said it had won the battle, killing about twenty Al-Shabaab fighters and forcing the rest to flee. Ahlu Sunna forces, which had only sustained light casualties, were now “pursuing the remnants of Al-Shabaab in the area". Ahlu Sunna wal Jama'a and government forces have been making significant gains against Al-Shabaab recently, in Mogadishu and other areas including lower Juba where Al-Shabaab suffered some serious setbacks, losing dozens of its fighters and a senior commander was captured after being seriously wounded.
In Mogadishu, the TFG has announced that armed forces personnel have been paid their salaries, each soldier receiving 200 US dollars. A Ministry of Defense official said the salary payment, which would be made monthly, was part of the promise the government had made to look after the soldiers and ensure that they received their salaries regularly. This is expected to boost the morale of the TFG forces that have been making significant gains on the ground, both in Mogadishu and in areas outside the capital. The TFG is now expected to solicit funds to pay the salaries of TFG forces fighting in central regions and in Gedo region. The TFG’s Deputy Prime Minister and Defense Minister recently visited these forces and encouraged them to continue their successful operations against Al-Shabaab.
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Disagreement
continues over TFG extension
Divisions continue
over the extension of the term of the Transitional Federal
Parliament (TFP) and of the other Transitional Federal Institutions
(TFIs). The parliamentary constitutional committee is arguing that
the election, for President, the Speaker of Parliament and his
deputies, should be held at the scheduled time, that is before the
TFG’s term ends in August. The Transitional
Federal
Government has made it clear it strongly opposes
holding the elections in August. The Cabinet has said the stated
date is “not appropriate”. The Cabinet believes that the TFG has
performed well in the last couple of months, making a lot of
progress on the ground and so consideration should be given to its
request for further time to accomplish the remaining transitional
tasks and consolidate security gains on the ground. The Cabinet
therefore is requesting a postponement of the elections to August
2012. The deputy chairman of the parliamentary constitutional
committee, however, says the elections should be held in August 2011
in accordance with the decision of the TFP in February, and they
should not be postponed. He also added that elections should be held
throughout the country despite the challenges that the government is
currently facing.
Meanwhile, the
President of the
Transitional Federal Government,
Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed, has been in Djibouti this
week where he held talks with Djibouti President Ismail Omar Guelleh.
President Sharif and his delegation were warmly received by
President Guelleh. The Djibouti President, who has just won his
third term in office, and President Sheikh Sharif discussed the
latest events in Somalia and other issues as well as his recent
visits to a number of African countries including Ethiopia.
According to sources in Djibouti, the Djibouti authorities advised
the TFG leadership to concentrate on deliverables and on
consolidation of gains on the ground until the end of the transition
period in August.
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The US-Africa Air Forces’ Conference
This week, a three
day conference for African Air Forces was held in Addis Ababa.
Organized by the United States on the theme “Building Air
Partnerships Across Africa” the conference was attended by some 150
participants including nearly thirty African air force commanders or
their deputies as well as representatives from US Air Forces Africa,
from AFRICOM and from civilian agencies and regional organizations
dealing with aviation issues and challenges to security in the air;
the conference has also been identifying ways to build on existing
regional and international cooperation and develop innovative
approaches to strategic partnerships.
Participants were
welcomed by Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister, Ato
Hailemariam Desalegn, who stressed that the need for Africa and the
United States to work together to counter terrorism and air related
activities was becoming increasingly evident. He noted the
activities of international terrorists and pirates which included
hostage-taking of oil tankers and cargo ships as well as shipments
of weapons to Somalia using aircraft. Faced by states which violate
the US arms embargo on Somalia, there was a need to consider more
practical regional instruments within the framework of international
law, said Ato Hailemariam. He believed the conference would
highlight the magnitude of the challenges facing Africa and provide
some much needed recommendations on how to deal with state-led
illicit air activities.
Other speakers
included General Norton Schwartz, the US Air Force Chief of Staff,
Major General Margaret Woodward, US Air Force Africa commander and
US Ambassador Donald Booth. In his keynote speech, General Schwartz
told the conference that an airpower strategy focused on Africa
would enable the US and its allies in Africa to address the root
causes of security problems before they manifested themselves. US
security interests were best served by building long-term
relationships with African countries and with regional
organizations. The conference, he said, brought together a community
of airmen linked by appreciation of what air power could do to
provide strategic and operational options and by a shared desire for
stability, security, political viability and opportunity for
economic development in Africa.
General Woodward,
the commander of Air Africa, the air component of AFRICOM, said
regional relationships based on respect, integrity and trust were
critical. The conference would provide the opportunity to strengthen
personal and professional relationships and build bilateral and
multi-lateral air partnerships. General Woodward noted that Africa
faced security challenges that were unique as well as others that
were shared globally, and added that the only chance to confront
these successfully was in partnership. She said the conference was
an example of the US desire to hear and learn from the perspectives
that the US African partners could give. Ambassador Booth also
emphasized the US priority in building strong and mutually
beneficial partnerships, and pointed out that recent events in North
Africa showed the importance of an open and responsive political
system and economic policies that could stimulate growth and
development.
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The Nile: An
Egyptian Public Diplomacy delegation visits Ethiopia
A Public Diplomacy
Delegation from Egypt starts a four day visit to Ethiopia today.The
group numbers over forty people and includes a number of prominent
political figures, among them three candidates in the forthcoming
presidential elections, members of parliament, community leaders,
popular figures from the Egyptian Revolution and members of the
Youth of the Egyptian Revolution as well as a number of
representatives of the Egyptian media. During its visit the group
will be attending a dinner hosted by President Girma Woldegiorghis
as well as having meetings with Prime Minister Meles, with Deputy
Prime Minister and Foreign Minister, Ato Hailemariam Desalegn, the
Speakers of the House of Peoples Representatives and the House of
Federation, and other senior officials and religious leaders.
A major subject of
discussion will, of course, be the issue of the Nile. The Egyptian
Ambassador to Ethiopia, Ambassador Tarik Ghoneim, recently noted
that the new Egyptian Government was willing to negotiate all
disputed Nile issues with Ethiopia and it wanted to start
discussions with all the Nile Basin states about the use of the Nile
waters. The Ambassador said everything was on the table and there
should be no looking back to the past. The Prime Minister of Egypt
is expected to visit Ethiopia shortly to discuss the issue further.
The Nile has always
been central to relations between Ethiopia and Egypt, and Ethiopia
has been a strong supporter of the Nile Basin Cooperative Framework
Agreement that was reached in May last year. Six of the nine
riparian countries have signed the agreement. Ethiopia hopes the
others, including the Sudan and Egypt, will sign this multilateral
agreement based as it is on the principles of equitable and
reasonable utilization of the river and on the obligation not to
cause appreciable harm to other riparian states. The upper riparian
countries have repeatedly assured the lower riparian states that
they have no interest whatever in harming them. The Framework
Agreement in fact offers a win-win solution for everybody.
Ethiopian officials
will also take the opportunity to explain to the Egyptian visitors
exactly why it is building the Grand Renaissance Dam on the Nile and
what this will achieve both for Ethiopia and for its neighbors. For
Ethiopia this will be a central element in its fight against
poverty, in addressing the challenges of poverty and
underdevelopment. The power produced by the Dam will play a major
role in implementing the country’s Growth and Transformation Plan.
It will help transform Ethiopia’s economy through the provision of
cheap sustainable power and the mobilization of resources.
At the same time,
the Dam will also sustain economic development on a much wider
level, allowing for the export of sustainable power to all the other
countries in the Nile Basin. It will help resolve the problems of
siltation which have been affecting other dams in both Sudan and
Egypt, prevent recurring catastrophic floods in Sudan, and provide
for a consistent and sustainable flow to the river. It will also
have the effect of cutting evaporation significantly and therefore
increase the actual amount of water available to downstream
countries.
The central point is
that Ethiopia and Egypt are linked by the Nile, and the Framework
Agreement offers partnership and cooperation based on principles
that give an equitable solution to all the riparian states. The
Government of Ethiopia strongly believes genuine negotiations and
collective bilateral actions will produce the win-win situation and
the environmental and economic development we all need.
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A National
Conference on the Nile
A National Conference on the Nile took
place yesterday at the Ghion Hotel in Addis Ababa. Organized by the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and the first of its kind, it was
attended by over three hundred people including members of the House
of Representatives of Parliament and of the Federation
Council, regional
administrations, ministers, representatives of religious groups, of
the private sector, academia, women’s and youth organizations and
members of the media. The objectives of the conference were: to
raise awareness of the efforts made by the government to negotiate
efficient and equitable use of the Nile water; to increase public
participation and build a national consensus on this and similarly
important national issues; and enhance the government’s decision
making procedures by providing evidence from concrete studies and
experience.
The Minister of Water and Energy, Ato
Alemayehu Tegenu, opened the conference, detailing the efforts to
realize equitable shares of the water resources of the Nile and the
achievements made so far. He emphasized that Ethiopia has no
intention to cause harm to others in the Nile Basin but was always
ready to promote efficient and equal use of the water by all
riparian countries and to help foster good all round relations. The
minister thanked the population for the contributions they were
making for the realization of the Renaissance Dam. It demonstrated,
he said, that all Ethiopians were highly committed to development
and ready to make sacrifices to realize their objectives.
Seven
papers relating to the use of the Nile water were presented by
various academics and others; and an additional presentation
entitled "Explanations on the Current Status of EPCO and the
significance of the Dam on its Economic Development in the Future"
was made by Ato Mehret Debebe, the head of the Ethiopian Power
Corporation. All presentations met the aim of raising awareness
about the Nile and of the negotiations that have been taking place
on the use of the water. All also highlighted the importance that
any actions should be based on the principle of causing no harm to
any of the riparian states.
In conclusion, a Conference Declaration
was agreed. This emphasized the need to urgently form a "National
Water Council" at the highest political level to have responsibility
to manage all issues dealing with the Nile and other trans-boundary
rivers. It also suggested a “National Expert Committee" should be
set up to take care of all legal and technical issues, including
consultation with the National Water Council. The Declaration called
upon the Ethiopian Government to make every effort to continue to
reach out to Egypt and the other non-signatory Nile Basin states and
to encourage them to subscribe to the Cooperative Framework
Agreement which would benefit all riparian states equally. The
Declaration calls for the enhancement of economic and investment
relations between Ethiopia and other riparian countries. This, it
said, was indispensable for building trust and confidence between
the governments and peoples of the Nile Basin.
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The
Ethiopian Renaissance Dam: Encouraging Downstream Gestures?
The launching of the
Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam has become a source of intense
debate and heightened interest among many. The reaction of the
peoples of Ethiopia has been exceptionally enthusiastic and the
outpouring of public support continues to gather momentum. But the
news of the launching of the Renaissance Dam has also drawn interest
from politicians and intellectuals of the lower riparian countries
whose usual response to any such development is strongly critical.
The government of Ethiopia has always been fully aware of the
difficulty of bringing the downstream countries on board despite a
mountain of evidence that the project is neither intended nor likely
to cause any appreciable harm to them. In the absence of a
cooperative framework to ensure equitable utilization of
trans-boundary resources, this is a palpable problem.
The policy objective
of Ethiopia’s water usage is the promotion of national efforts
towards efficient and optimum utilization of its water resources for
sustainable socio- economic development. Recognizing the tremendous
potential of its untapped water resources, Ethiopia has adopted a
strategic plan aimed at eradicating poverty and lessening the
impacts of climate change, recurrent drought, environmental
degradation, and famine that have bedeviled the country for
centuries. The decision to build the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam
as part of the ambitious Growth and Transformation Plan is a
significant element of transformation of the economy through
sustainable provision of cheap electric power to various sectors. It
will also mobilize the necessary resources to unlock economic
development by exporting power to the neighboring countries,
demonstrating the government's commitment to strengthen cooperation
and equitable utilization by all. The benefits will apply to both
Egypt and Sudan, helping to rehabilitate the natural environment of
the upper Nile Basin; provide more irrigation opportunities
particularly in Sudan; boost upstream water storage and help avoid
devastating floods; and help cut back on the wastage from downstream
evaporation at Jebel Awliya or Lakes Nuba and Nasser.
It is against this
backdrop that recent developments in both Egypt and Sudan merit some
mention. In the past, saber-rattling has been the usual response of
Egyptian officialdom to any such idea as the Renaissance Dam. This
time the reaction has been largely encouraging. The newly appointed
Egyptian Prime Minister has already expressed interest in paying a
visit to Ethiopia to discuss the issue. Other officials have been
expressing willingness to negotiate over the Nile. Egypt has yet to
stop its diplomatic campaign against the financing of similar
projects, but the fact that there are now officials and politicians
speaking in terms of cooperation and dialogue is in itself a welcome
development. The semi-official Egyptian newspaper, Al Ahram, even
went beyond these diplomatic niceties when it castigated some
Egyptian experts for insinuating that Ethiopia and other upstream
countries are always out to get Egypt. It is very unusual for Al
Ahram to take such a positive stand vis-à-vis any development on the
Nile by other countries. It is indeed a very good sign. The visit to
Ethiopia by a large Egyptian delegation this weekend will hopefully
also infuse an element of enthusiasm into the idea of cooperation.
The reaction by
Sudanese officials has been even more forthcoming. Indications are
that the Sudanese government is aware of the great potential that
the Dam has to offer the Sudan. Sudanese intellectuals and
politicians have been taking a carefully nuanced approach towards
the possibility of cooperation over the project. We hope that this
will continue.
All this suggests two
things. One is born out of realization that Ethiopia has changed,
and changed forever, in terms of its capacity to finance such
projects as the Renaissance Dam. Indeed, the decision to go ahead
with the project using domestic finance has freed many in Egypt and
Sudan from the illusion that poverty in Ethiopia would continue to
guarantee their monopoly over the Nile waters. More importantly, it
indicates that the idea of cooperation and equitable utilization of
resources may finally be sinking in among officials in Egypt and
Sudan. If indeed this is the case, the Nile will once again become
the source of mutual development that it ought to be. This has been
the consistent desire and interest of the Government and the Peoples
of Ethiopia.
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Sierra Leone’s Golden Jubilee
On Wednesday, Sierra Leone celebrated the
50th anniversary of its existence as a sovereign state.
It became independent after more than 150 years of British colonial
rule on April 27th, 1961. Celebrations of the country’s
Golden Jubilee have been going on all month both in Sierra Leone
itself and among Sierra Leoneans around the world. Here in Addis
Ababa, the embassy had organized a number of events to celebrate the
occasion, including a symposium last Friday at Africa Hall on the
subject of “Sierra Leone at 50: Food self-sufficiency”, a photo
exhibition, and an Independence Day reception on Wednesday. The
occasion is also being marked by Muslim prayers at the Abadier
Mosque today and at the International Evangelical Church on Sunday.
Ato Abdulfetah Abdulahi, Minister of
Labor and Social Affairs, attended the reception on Wednesday to
convey the congratulations of the Government of Ethiopia to the
people of Sierra Leone and to President Koroma on “this unique and
highly auspicious day”. As the Minister noted this was a day that
belonged above all others to the people of Sierra Leone who had
sacrificed their lives to secure independence and who continued to
struggle for sustainable peace, stability and democracy. He assured
Sierra Leone that Ethiopia fully supported their efforts and would
do everything possible to assist. The Minister emphasized that
Ethiopia’s relationship with Sierra Leone began over forty years ago
in 1969, and Sierra Leone opened its embassy here in Addis Ababa a
year later. He said Ethiopia and Sierra Leone had continued to work
together in the African Union, the United Nations, the Non- Aligned
Movement and within the ACP/EU framework. He hoped that this close
collaboration would continue and deepen over the next half century,
and, on behalf of the people and Government of Ethiopia, he offered
his best wishes for the future to President Koroma and the people of
Sierra Leone.
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A demonstration of
Eritrean refugees in Addis Ababa
On Wednesday last
week, hundreds of Eritrean refugees in Addis Ababa held a
demonstration calling for democratic government to be established in
Eritrea and an end to the dictatorial and repressive rule of
President Isaias Aferwerki. Tens of thousands have fled from Eritrea
in recent years, and according to the Eritrean urban Refugees
Association in Ethiopia there are 60,000 in Ethiopia in addition to
the hundreds of thousands in Sudan and elsewhere in the world. The
demonstration was given added point by the recent reports of the
death by drowning of more than 325 Eritrean asylum seekers in the
Mediterranean when the boat on which they were trying to cross from
Libya to Italy sank on March 22. Eritreans all over the world have
held demonstrations and candlelight vigils in memory of the dead.
The demonstrators in
Addis Ababa, numbering some sixteen hundred, called for an end to
the unlimited national service in Eritrea, the most militarized
state in Africa, indeed in the world. Conscription for all those
aged 15 to 50 has been in force since 1994, and only a fraction have
been demobilized. The demonstrators said that the national service
program was supposed to last for 18 months but in practice it was
unlimited. Some called it “modern day slavery”, with the use of
conscripts for forced labor. They accused the government of ruining
the lives of the younger generation. This is one of the main reasons
why so many youngsters continue to flee the country every year. The
demonstrators, who said they were there to highlight the injustices
in Eritrea, called on the international community to impose more
sanctions on the regime in Asmara.
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