Qudhac Posted July 15, 2007 Somali peace conference postponed AGAIN BBC, 15 July 2007--A national reconciliation conference in Somalia's capital, Mogadishu has opened - and then immediately adjourned. Organisers postponed the conference until Thursday to allow more time for all the delegates to arrive. Several mortar shells landed near the venue on Sunday, injuring civilians, but President Abdullahi Yusuf said violence would not deter the talks. The main Islamist opposition have refused to attend, saying the venue is not neutral. Somalia has been without a functioning government for 16 years. Clan focus Hundreds of Ethiopian and Somali government troops are patrolling the streets in Mogadishu and guarding the former police warehouse where the talks will be held. Over 1,000 clan elders, former warlords and politicians from across the country have been invited. The opposition Islamic Courts, who were driven from the city by Ethiopian and Somali forces and who are now mainly in exile in Eritrea, say they cannot attend because of the presence of their Ethiopian enemies. A number of delegates from the international community who had planned to attend the opening ceremony were unable to, when their flights were cancelled over security concerns. When talks begin, they are expected to focus on clan reconciliation, disarmament and sharing natural resources. But critics say clan conflict is not the major problem and the focus should be on reconciliation between political and armed groups. "The conference would make sense if it was bringing rival politicians and armed groups to the same table," said Ahmed Diriye, a spokesman for the powerful H clan. "But if the idea is to talk about a non-existent tribal conflict, it's a waste of money and energy." "There is no clan conflict at the moment in Somalia but there is a political conflict," Yusuf Hassan Ibrahim, a member of an opposition alliance linked to the Islamic Courts told the BBC. "We are calling for a national reconciliation conference which will deal with the differences between the Transitional Federal Government and the other stakeholders, including former parliamentary groups, the Islamic Courts, civil society and the Somali diaspora." Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
LayZie G. Posted July 15, 2007 How can this be called national conference when I can't even spot a single female in the crowd? Pure jokes Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
General Duke Posted July 15, 2007 ^^^^^^^^^ Maybe these little beautiful girls will lighten your mood[/i] Or maybe the old elegent bunch will help It is the firts meeting all clans have taken part in the capital of Somalia. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Mooge Posted April 16, 2011 Remembering Somalia's first peace conference. hero abdulahi yusuf call it and made it happen. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Mooge Posted April 16, 2011 just incase our memory is short and we forget who was the man who was visionary and against UN and its meddling from day one. it was halyeey cabdulahi yusuf. he wanted a peace conference inside the country and he made it happen. The first ever peace conference attended by tribal, politicians, women and educated elite. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Taleexi Posted April 16, 2011 GD: Those pics invoked memories. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Mooge Posted April 16, 2011 indeed taleexi. the pictures invoke great memories. they show what abdulahi yusuf tried to accomplish. the clannist hatemongers were insulting him then and today they realized the man was a legend. no region in the country was left out. everyone showed up from every clan chief. long live the great one. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites