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US URGES SOMALI UNITY IN RARE PERSONAL APPEALS TO WARLORDS

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US URGES SOMALI UNITY IN RARE PERSONAL APPEALS TO WARLORDS

 

Friday, 27 January 2006,

 

By andnetwork .com

 

The United States this week urged lawless Somalia's fractious leaders to unite in rare personal appeals to members of the country's deeply divided transitional government, including Mogadishu warlords, according to documents obtained by AFP on Friday.

 

In what may signal the start of a tentative resumption in

Washington's engagement with the war-shattered Horn of Africa nation since it was forced to withdraw nearly 13 years ago, a senior US envoy has told individual government members to end their squabbles.

 

"The future of Somalia depends on leaders such as yourselves putting aside partisan differences and coming together to provide collective patriotic leadership to the Somali nation," US

ambassador to Kenya William Bellamy said.

"No one man, no one clan or faction or party can provide that leadership," he said in letters sent Monday to Somalia's transitional President Abudullahi Yusuf Ahmed, three top aides and

seven warlords, at least four of whom are opposed to Yusuf.

 

Yusuf's government has been mired in internal disputes and remains largely powerless with the parliament unable to meet since

the administration moved from exile in Kenya -- where it was created in 2004 -- to Somalia.

 

The rifts have raised fears of the country's complete collapse and a rise in Islamic extremism there that could threaten the

region and become a base for terrorists.

After months of saber-rattling rhetoric and troops build-ups, the main antagonists, Yusuf and parliament speaker Sharif Hassan

Sheikh Adan, met in Yemen and agreed in principle to resolve their disputes.

 

Bellamy urged the recipients to meet what he termed the "modest"

goals of the deal, which many believe may collapse without

sustained international intervention.

The identical letters mirror US statements issued collectively

to Somali leaders but are the first personal entreaties by a US

official to individual members of the government.

The letters, obtained by AFP from a diplomatic source, were

written on US government stationery with the letterhead "Embassy of

the United States of America" and signed by Bellamy in his capacity

as a US ambassador.

The United States has been loathe to involve itself in Somalia

since its disastrous experience there in 1993 when 18 US Marines

were killed in a bloody day-long battle with heavily armed

militiamen, resulting in Washington's withdrawal from the country.

 

 

Source : Sapa-AFP /yr

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