Somali Pirates Issue Warning to Europeans


Medeshi
Somali Pirates Issue Warning to Europeans
By Alisha Ryu Nairobi22 September 2008
Somali pirates, who have been relentlessly attacking ships this year off the coast of Somalia, say they will kill any European they capture if France fails to release six pirates seized by French commandos earlier this month. VOA Correspondent Alisha Ryu has this exclusive report from our East Africa Bureau in Nairobi.
(Photo: Canadian Navy sailor guards World Food Program ship into Mogadishu, 18 Sep 2008 )
In a telephone interview with VOA, a man identified as the spokesman of the pirate group based in the northern Puntland town of Eyl says the group wants the European Union to pressure France to release the six pirates immediately.
The spokesman, who calls himself Bileh, says if other European Union nations refuse to negotiate the release of his compatriots, his group will begin targeting all Europeans. He says every European hostage would be beheaded.
It is not clear whether the pirate group is in contact with European Union officials about the matter. The captured Somali pirates were transferred to Paris after French commandos mounted a raid last week to free a French couple kidnapped by pirates off the coast of Somalia on September 2.
The French military also seized another group of pirates during an operation in April. But Bileh, the pirate spokesman in Eyl, made no mention of them, suggesting that the pirates taken to Paris in April may have belonged to another group.
Last week, EU foreign ministers decided to set up a special unit to coordinate warship patrols off the coast of Somalia to protect ships from piracy.
In support of that mission, Spain deployed military aircraft to the Horn on Saturday to collect information on the movements of pirates. EU foreign ministers have not decided whether to create a special naval mission to pursue the pirates and capture them.
This year, well-armed pirates, using powerful speedboats, have attacked more than 55 ships and private vessels sailing through the Gulf of Aden and along Somalia's east coast. Piracy is threatening to disrupt global commerce and driving up costs because of soaring insurance premiums.
The group in Eyl, Puntland is believed to be the largest of the various pirate groups operating in Somalia. Pirates in Eyl and the factional leaders and businessmen who control them are said to have earned about $30 million this year in ransom payments. The group is currently holding about a dozen ships and their crew hostage.
Bileh insists the money ship owners are paying to free to their vessels and crew is not ransom, but fines and taxes being collected on behalf of the Somali people.
Bileh says the ships are being fined and taxed because they are trespassing on Somali territorial waters. He says in the absence of a functioning central government in Somalia, his group is working hard to collect enough money to form a navy strong enough to protect the Somali coast from foreign exploitation.
Eyewitness reports from Eyl suggest that pirates are using their share of the money to build palatial homes and to buy expensive cars. They are also believed to be purchasing increasingly sophisticated weapons and boats.
Somalia descended into factional chaos after the government of dictator Mohamed Siad Barre fell in 1991. The country is one of the poorest in the world, with more than 40 percent of its population in critical need of food aid.

US Policy Shifts towards Somaliland


Medeshi Sept 22, 2008
US Policy Shifts towards Somaliland
by Scott A Morgan
In what appears to be a effort to reward stablilty in a highly unstable part of the World ,The US is going to increase the amount of aid it sends to the "Breakaway Region" of Somaliland. On the surface that can be seen as the US growing increasingly frustrated with the Pace of "Nation Building" within Somalia.

In Recent Weeks there have been several Incidents of Piracy on the High Seas. In at least one instance there has been Western Intervention to Free some of those that were taken hostage. Several Nations will be deploying Warships to this volatile region in the near future to address this rapidly unfolding and deteriorating situation. The Situation on the Ground isn't much better either with Islamist Militias targeting Peacekeepers.

Earlier this year US Undersecretary of State for African Affairs Jendayi Frazier paid a visit to Hargeysa. Security Issues were forefront Naturally in her visit. The Combined Joint Task Force-Horn of Africa (CJTF-HOA) already has some contacts with Somaliland Authorities as well as several US Funded Aid Agencies. Somaliland has been registering Political Parties for its Presidential Elections in 2009.

The Visit by Jessica Davis Ba who is the US Diplomat Responsible for Somali Political and Economic Interests in the US Embassy in Nairobi and a representative from the USAID (United States Agency for International Development) was a follow-up to the trip of Underseceretary Frazier. The US Feels that Somaliland has made great Economic and Political gains since it declared its unilateral Independence back in 1991.

There are concerns in Washington that the rise in both Global Food and Petroleum Prices could be a hinderance to the Emergance of an Independent Somaliland. Several Countries have sent Delegations to Hargeysa in recent weeks to determine if any Economic Investments are indeed feasable. There are concerns about the youth of the country leaving school early to take on other endeavors currently.

With the rest of Somalia continuing to suffer Famine and the effects of a very effective Insurgency it is not a bad idea to reach out to People and areas that are having a modicum of success. Although the US has no immediate plans to open up a direct contact with Hargeysa the current Administration will use the contacts it already has to further improve ties. In the past the United States has stated that it will wait until the African Union Recgonizes Somaliland as an Independent State before it does.

In Recent Weeks there have been reports that Ethiopia is considering pulling out of Somalia. If this occurs than once again the efforts of the United Nations to restore a functioning Government to Somalia will have failed once again. Efforts to have African Peacekeepers on the ground have been lacking. Famine is a growing concern as is the rise of Piracy in the region known as Puntland. So it appears that the US is once again hedging its bets in a volatile region.

Somalia : Hurtling toward disaster


Medeshi Sept 22, 2008
by Ken Menkhaus
This is the first of two ENOUGH strategy papers on Somalia by Ken Menkhaus, a professor at Davidson College and a specialist on the Horn of Africa. Based on recent field research, the first half of this report provides an analysis of the current crisis in Somalia. The second half critically examines why international policies toward Somalia have produced disastrously unintended results, and makes an urgent case for a review of those policies. A follow-up report will explore options and make recommendations for a new, more effective, international approach to Somalia.
The world has grown numb to Somalia’s seemingly endless crises—18 years of state collapse, failed peace talks, violent lawlessness and warlordism, internal displacement and refugee flows, chronic underdevelopment, intermittent famine, piracy, regional proxy wars, and Islamic extremism. It would be easy to conclude that today’s disaster is merely a continuation of a long pattern of intractable problems there, and move on to the next story in the newspaper. So Somalia’s in flames again—what’s new?
The answer is that much is new this time, and it would be a dangerous error of judgment to brush off Somalia’s current crisis as more of the same. It would be equally dangerous to call for the same tired formulas for U.N. peacekeeping, state-building, and counterterrorism operations that have achieved little since 1990. Seismic political, social, and security changes are occurring in the country, and none bode well for the people of Somalia or the international community.


Over the past 18 months, Somalia has descended into terrible levels of displacement and humanitarian need, armed conflict and assassinations, political meltdown, radicalization, and virulent anti-Americanism. Whereas in the past the country’s endemic political violence—whether Islamist, clan-based, factional, or criminal in nature—was local and regional in scope, it is now taking on global significance.
As Enough’s April 2008 report on Somalia (“15 Years After Black Hawk Down: Somalia’s Chance?”) argued, this is the exact opposite of what the United States and its allies sought to promote when they supported the December 2006 Ethiopian military intervention in Somalia to oust an increasingly bellicose Islamist movement in Mogadishu. Indeed, the situation in Somalia today exceeds the worst-case scenarios conjured up by regional analysts when they first contemplated the possible impact of an Ethiopian military occupation. How did it get to be this bad?

Work of Evil: Beyond the Worst-Case Scenario in Somalia

Medeshi Sept 22, 2008
Work of Evil: Beyond the Worst-Case Scenario in Somalia
by Chris Floyd
I.Jim Lobe at Antiwar.com brings fresh news of what has become, proportionately, the most savage, brutal and ruinous front in the global campaign of military aggression known as the "War on Terror": Somalia.
We have been tracking the situation in Somalia here since American military and security forces and their Ethiopian proxies invaded the country in December 2006, in a "regime change" operation to overthrow the first quasi-stable government Somalia had seen in 15 years. As we noted earlier this year:
American forces have bombed fleeing refugees, slaughtered innocent herdsmen and destroyed villages in attempts to assassinate a handful of individual alleged, on shaky and specious evidence, to be "part of" or "associated with" or "linked to" al Qaeda. American agents have seized refugees from the Somali war, including U.S. citizens, and had them "renditioned" to the notorious prisons of the Ethiopian dictatorship. And as we have noted here many times, the Bush Administration has sent in death squads to "kill anyone left alive" after American strikes.
Not a word has been said in the presidential campaign about this ongoing atrocity, this open culpability in yet another vast war crime. Naturally one doesn't expect any comment or concern from John McCain, whose robotic neo-connism can only applaud this violent projection of American dominance in yet another Muslim land. (As neoconnist Michael Ledeen once famously proclaimed: "Every ten years or so, the United States needs to pick up some small crappy little country and throw it against the wall, just to show the world we mean business." This is about as perfect an encapsulation of the mindset of the bipartisan foreign policy establishment as can be imagined. For another example, see the "liberal" Thomas Friedman here.)
But neither has there been a single criticism or condemnation -- or even a mention -- of the murderous operation in Somalia by the Democratic candidate: a man whose own father was a black African Muslim like those being slaughtered with American backing today. Of course, Barack Obama has taken some pains to distance himself from the African side of his heritage -- perhaps understandable in a country where his own running mate brags about being from a "slave state" and not long ago expressed wonderment at the fact that an African-American politician (in fact, Obama himself!) could be so well-spoken and even "clean." And it goes without saying that an aspiring leader of the Terror War would want to renounce even more firmly any association with his Islamic background. Still, you would think that sheer partisan self-interest alone would entice the Democrats to bring up the subject of Somalia, pointing to it as yet enough botched and bloody catastrophe of Bush's foreign policy.
Then again, perhaps they know there is no political mileage in the issue. After all, who cares? No Americans have died in the operation (although some Americans were "rendered" to Ethiopia's notoriously draconian prisons). And after the initial barrage of refugee bombing and village destroying, America's direct involvement has been limited to the occasional lobbing of missiles into civilian homes -- and whatever secret missions are being carried out by U.S. covert operators and the death squads that clean up after them. And as the entire sordid enterprise has long been ignored by the mainstream media -- except for a rare story now and then, almost always shorn of any context or mention of America's instrumental role in the war -- it would require a great deal of background and explanation to make a denunciation of U.S. policy in Somalia comprehensible to a deliberately misinformed and blithely unconcerned American electorate. Who has time for that kind of boring stuff, when there are bumper stickers and sound bites to propagate?
There's also one other little point: the hearty he-man Terror Warriors at the top of the Democratic ticket obviously support America's actions in Somalia. If they did not, they would have condemned them long ago.
II.Lobe reports on a major new study that confirms what we have been saying here for months: the American-backed "regime change" in Somalia has created one of the world's worst humanitarian disasters -- and has radicalized much of the ruined country, incubating the very extremism and terrorism that the invasion was ostensibly -- ostensibly --designed to quash.
(The "War on Terror" has created so many vast new fertile fields for extremism and terrorism on all its fronts that a cynic might be forgiven for suspecting that the creation of more terrorism is, in fact, one of its principal aims. After all, who have been the chief beneficiaries of modern terrorism? Those who have reaped immeasurable riches and vastly augmented authoritarian power from "counter-terrorism." If the "War on Terrorism" had not arisen -- just in time to replace the Cold War -- something else would have had to been invented to keep the loot and power flowing to (and from) the war machine. Of course, if we are sliding into a new Cold War with resurgent Russia and ever-burgeoning China, then we may see the War on Terrorism start to diminish in importance. But for now, terror is still trumps in the loot-and-power game.)
Lobe points us to a report issued this week by Enough, a human rights group created by a cooperative effort between the International Crisis Group and the Center for American Progress. Written by Ken Menkhaus, a leading American expert on the region, the report -- "Somalia: A Country in Peril, a Policy Crisis" -- presents the stark reality of this Terror War atrocity:

Over the past 18 months, Somalia has descended into terrible levels of displacement and humanitarian need, armed conflict and assassinations, political meltdown, radicalization, and virulent anti-Americanism. Whereas in the past the country’s endemic political violence—whether Islamist, clan-based, factional, or criminal in nature—was local and regional in scope, it is now taking on global significance....Indeed, the situation in Somalia today exceeds the worst-case scenarios conjured up by regional analysts when they first contemplated the possible impact of an Ethiopian military occupation.

(Continued after the jump.) The report makes clear that the Bush Administration's malign intervention in Somalia began well before the Ethiopian invasion in 2006. Indeed, it was an application of the age-old American policy of "divide and conquer" -- deliberately fomenting violent conflict in the society of a targeted country -- that helped radicalize and empower extremist factions in Somalia:

The coalition of clans, militia leaders, civic groups, and Islamists which formed the Mogadishu Group [which opposed the Ethiopian-backed 'Transitional Federal Government' set up in 2004] were themselves divided, however, and war erupted between two wings of the group in early 2006. This war was precipitated by a U.S.-backed effort to create an alliance of clan militia leaders to capture a small number of foreign al Qaeda operatives believed to be enjoying safe haven in Mogadishu as guests of the hard-line Somalia Islamists, especially the jihadi militia known as the shabaab. The cynically named Alliance for the Restoration of Peace and Counter-Terrorism, or ARPCT, as the U.S.-backed group was called, clashed with local Islamists and within months was decisively defeated. The clan militias’ defeat paved the way for the rise of the Islamic Courts Union, or ICU, which for seven months in 2006 came to control and govern all of Mogadishu and most of south-central Somalia.

The first American intervention failed to bring its hired warlords to power, but instead paved the way for a coalition of moderate and hardline Islamist factions to govern. And for a few months, this worked well:

The ICU quickly delivered impressive levels of street security and law and order to Mogadishu and south-central Somalia. It reopened the seaport and international airport and began providing basic government services. In the process, the ICU won widespread support from war-weary Somalis, even those who did not embrace the idea of Islamic rule.

Factional disputes between moderates and hardliners -- with the latter taking increasingly strident public positions -- gave Ethiopia the excuse for its long-planned, American-backed invasion. As an April 2008 report for Enough by John Prendergast notes:

...In this volatile region, the U.S.-led “Global War on Terror” has become intertwined with Ethiopia’s own response to regional and internal threats. When Islamists established a foothold in southern Somalia in mid-2006, Ethiopia began planning an invasion aimed at propping up a fragile and unpopular transitional government in Mogadishu. With encouragement from the Bush administration, Ethiopian forces attacked in December 2006, and 16 months later they are hunkered down with no end in sight. To make matters worse, neighboring Eritrea’s support for insurgents in Somalia and oppositionists in Ethiopia means that Somalia is further complicated by a proxy war between Ethiopia and Eritrea, one that could contribute to a disastrous resumption of war between those two states.
The United States is concentrating most of its energies on capturing or killing three foreign Al Qaeda fugitives and a dozen or so of their Somali associates. U.S. support includes a vast and sustained intelligence effort, support for self-interested Somali “counter-terrorism” agencies, and obstruction of international efforts to broker a ceasefire and power-sharing agreement with Islamists...
U.S. counter-terrorism policy has failed to differentiate organic resistance movements in Somalia and elsewhere from real terrorists. By branding all resistance “terrorism” and providing aid to factions of the Somali transitional government that are simply warlords with titles, the United States has contributed to further polarization and made a political settlement less likely.

This is standard practice on every Terror War front, of course. Prendergast goes on to say:

U.S. policy since 9/11 has been a central ingredient in the Horn of Africa’s descent into crisis and the growth of extremism. Concerned that Somalia might become a safe haven for Al Qaeda and a breeding ground for Islamist extremism, the United States has designated Somalia as a priority in the Global War on Terror. But not only have U.S. counter-terrorism efforts failed to mitigate the threat in any sustainable way, they threaten to blow it out of all control. By placing the desire to capture or kill three “high value” Al Qaeda targets above the welfare of millions of Somalis, the United States and its Ethiopian allies have engendered profound resentment, promoted radicalization, and created the conditions for thousands of young radicals to turn toward extremist groups.

Lobe has more from other experts who attended the most recent report's release:
"The (current) crisis is fundamentally different and fundamentally worse than the situation of the last decade and a half," said Chris Albin-Lackey, a Horn of Africa specialist at Human Rights Watch (HRW), who appeared with Menkhaus at the report's release at a conference sponsored by at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars here Wednesday.
Albin-Lackey, who has conducted some 80 interviews of Somali refugees in East Africa in the past month, said ongoing violence, including almost daily artillery bombardments by Ethiopian army and TFG forces on the one hand and opposition militias, including the Islamist Shabaab on the other, as well as assassinations carried out by both sides, have added to the insecurity.
"People have nowhere to turn for security," he said, adding that search operations by TFG forces, while nominally for the purpose of arresting suspected insurgents, had become "an excuse for murder, rape and looting on an incredibly large scale." As a result, he said, Mogadishu has become "largely depopulated" with about two-thirds of the population – or about 800,000 people – having left their homes there over the past 18 months.

The new report by Menkhaus details the humanitarian catastrophe:
The humanitarian nightmare in Somalia is the result of a lethal cocktail of factors. The large-scale displacement caused by the fighting in Mogadishu is the most important driver. The displaced have fled mainly into the interior of the country, where they lack access to food, clean water, basic health care, livelihoods, and support networks. Internally displaced persons, or IDPs, are among the most vulnerable populations in any humanitarian emergency. With 700,000 people out of a population of perhaps 6 million in south-central Somalia forced to flee their homes, the enormity of the emergency is obvious...
Second, food prices have skyrocketed, eroding the ability of both IDPs and other households to feed themselves. The rise in food prices is due to a global spike in the cost of grains and fuel; chronic insecurity and crime, which has badly disrupted the flow of commercial food into the country; and an epidemic of counterfeiting of the Somali shilling by politicians and businesspeople, creating hyperinflation and robbing poorer Somalis of purchasing power. Mother Nature is not cooperating either: a severe drought is gripping much of central Somalia, increasing displacement, killing off livestock, and reducing harvests in farming areas.
Third, humanitarian agencies in Somalia are facing daunting obstacles to delivery of food aid. There is now virtually no “humanitarian space” in which aid can safely be delivered. Until recently, the TFG and its uncontrolled security forces were mainly responsible for most obstacles to delivery of food aid. TFG hardliners view the provision of assistance to IDPs as support to an enemy population—terrorists and terrorist sympathizers in their view—and have sought to impede the flow of aid convoys through a combination of bureaucratic and security impediments. They also harass and detain staff of local and international non-governmental organizations, or NGOs, and U.N. agencies, accusing them of supporting the insurgency. Uncontrolled and predatory TFG security forces, along with opportunistic criminal gangs, have erected over 400 militia roadblocks (each of which demands as much as $500 per truck to pass) and have kidnapped local aid workers for ransom.


Since May 2008, however, jihadist cells in Mogadishu linked to the shabaab have become an additional threat to humanitarian actors. They are engaged in a campaign of threats and alleged assassinations against any and all Somalis working for western aid agencies or collaborating with the U.N. and Western NGOs. Not all shabaab members embrace this policy (the shabaab leader Sheikh Mukhtar Robow has condemned the assassinations and is known to be working to provide protection for aid operations in his clan’s home region), but jihadist cells in Mogadishu are now increasingly fragmented and answer to no one, and some of these cells are believed to have targeted national aid workers and civil society leaders.

As Lobe notes: "The UN recently estimated that, barring substantial improvement in the security situation, some 3.5 million Somalis will be dependent on humanitarian aid by the end of this year." That is more than half the population of the entire country reduced to the most absolute penury. An equivalent number would be 14 million people in Iraq -- or 150 million in the United States.
Meanwhile, as we have seen in Iraq, the violent extremism, government terror and sheer chaos unleashed by the U.S.-backed invasion is destroying Somali society itself. From Lobe:

The assassination campaign by TFG hardliners and fragments of the shabaab movement is the latest attack on Somalia’s once vibrant civil society and has the potential to morph into a violent purge of all professionals and civic figures. Somali civic figures are in shock at this latest threat, and are either fleeing the capital or keeping a very low profile. This is an enormous setback for hopes to consolidate peace in the country...
A peace agreement signed last month by moderate factions of the opposition and the TFG is already in great peril from hardliners in both camps -- and from U.S. policies which continue to exacerbate the conflict. Lobe reports:
But the implementation of the agreement faces "steep challenges," warned Menkhaus, not least because "the moderates [who negotiated the accord] don't control any of the armed groups." While the Shabaab have already denounced the [moderate] leaders as "apostates," he noted, hard-liners in the TFG know that they can stay in power "if and only if the Ethiopians stay."
Only by reinforcing the moderates can the international community, including the US, enhance the chances for the agreement's successful implementation and, with it, the chances for reconciliation, according to Menkhaus. But that will require major changes in US and western policies, which have "actually worked to strengthen and embolden hardliners" over the past two years.
In that respect, the US emphasis on counterterrorism has been particularly destructive, not only in supporting the Ethiopian offensive in December, 2006, but, more recently, in placing the Shabaab on its list of designated terrorist groups last March. That step not only isolated opposition moderates from their own coalition but also gave the Shabaab "even more reason to sabotage" ongoing peace talks.
At the same time, Washington has provided "robust financial and logistical support to armed paramilitaries resisting the command and control of the TGF, even though they technically wear a TFG hat" to both fight the Shabaab and track down suspected terrorists.
"To the extent that these security forces also deeply oppose...reconciliation efforts with the opposition, the US counterterrorism partnerships have also undermined peace-building efforts by emboldening spoilers in the government camp," according to the report...
The Tomahawk missile attack that killed Shabaab leader Aden Hashi Ayro [and at least two dozen civilians] in May – the latest in a series of similar strikes against armed Islamists in Somalia, allegedly tied to al-Qaeda – resulted in a sharp radicalization in the group, which announced at the time that it would strike against US and western targets, including aid workers, as well as Ethiopian and TFG forces, compounding an already dramatic humanitarian crisis.

Again, these are policies that seem designed to produce more terrorism, more conflict, more instability, more death and suffering. Certainly, no sentient observer could believe that the American actions in Somalia are in any way designed to alleviate these conditions.
III.But perhaps we are being too cynical in suspecting subtle Machiavellian ploys behind U.S. policy in Somalia. It could be as brutally simple as this: the bipartisan imperial elite want to have their way -- they want to crush anyone they have designated as an enemy, they want to have their own clients and puppets in power, they want to "project dominance" over strategic regions, they want to frighten other nations into compliance with Washington's wishes, etc., etc. -- and they don't care what it costs. In other words, perhaps they have not deliberately set out to destroy a nation and grind its helpless people into the dust....but if that's what it takes to get their way, then by God, that's what they'll do. It's not their fault if these darkie Muslims won't play ball.
This is of course a gangster mentality: "If you do what we want, nobody gets hurt. Hey, we might even send you a turkey at Christmas, or get your nephew a job or something. But if you cross us, then you'll get what's coming to you -- and it'll be your own damn fault."
This hideous mentality is not restricted to the Bush Administration. It is the long-standing philosophy of America's bipartisan ruling elite. As Major General Smedley Butler noted back in 1933:

War is just a racket. A racket is best described, I believe, as something that is not what it seems to the majority of people. Only a small inside group knows what it is about. It is conducted for the benefit of the very few at the expense of the masses....
I spent thirty-three years and four months in active military service as a member of this country's most agile military force, the Marine Corps. I served in all commissioned ranks from Second Lieutenant to Major-General. And during that period, I spent most of my time being a high-class muscle-man for Big Business, for Wall Street and for the Bankers. In short, I was a racketeer, a gangster for capitalism....
I helped make Mexico, especially Tampico, safe for American oil interests in 1914. I helped make Haiti and Cuba a decent place for the National City Bank boys to collect revenues in. I helped in the raping of half a dozen Central American republics for the benefits of Wall Street. The record of racketeering is long. I helped purify Nicaragua for the international banking house of Brown Brothers in 1909-1912. I brought light to the Dominican Republic for American sugar interests in 1916. In China I helped to see to it that Standard Oil went its way unmolested.
During those years, I had, as the boys in the back room would say, a swell racket. Looking back on it, I feel that I could have given Al Capone a few hints. The best he could do was to operate his racket in three districts. I operated on three continents.

The racket is immeasurably more vast and more powerful these days. Somalia is its latest -- and one of its most cruelly ravaged -- victims. Yet among the great and good of America, not a word is raised in protest or opposition to the nation's complicity in this work of evil.

Military can't guarantee safety off Somalia: US Navy

Medeshi Sept 22, 2008
Military can't guarantee safety off Somalia: US Navy
LONDON (Reuters) - The U.S. Navy said on Monday allied warships were doing all they could to thwart piracy in the strategic Gulf of Aden, but shipping companies should take their own measures to protect their vessels and crews.
The warning came as it emerged Somali pirates had hijacked another vessel off the Horn of Africa on Sunday, bringing the total seized so far this year to more than 30.
The U.S. Navy said the international naval force CTF-150 had stopped more then 12 attacks since May. CTF-150 comprises of warships from nations including Britain, France, Canada, Germany, Pakistan and the United States.
"The coalition does not have the resources to provide 24-hour protection for the vast number of merchant vessels in the region," said Combined Maritime Forces commander, U.S. vice admiral Bill Gortney.
"The shipping companies must take measures to defend their vessels and their crews," he said in a statement, urging merchant ships to employ their own security teams.
Last week global shipping groups clubbed together to call for naval powers to do more to protect the corridor. The sealine in the Arabian Sea between Yemen and Somalia links Asia to Europe via the Suez Canal and is critical to Gulf oil shipments.
Gortney said multinational naval patrols in support of the U.N. International Maritime Organization's (IMO) call in August for assistance to fight piracy was only part of the solution.
"Coalition maritime efforts will give the IMO time to work international efforts that will ultimately lead to a long-term solution," he said.
"This is a problem that starts ashore and requires an international solution. We made this clear at the outset -- our efforts cannot guarantee safety in the region."

18 Tourists 'abducted' in Egypt

Medeshi Sept 22, 2008
Tourists 'abducted' in Egypt
At least 18 people, including 11 foreign tourists, have been abducted in Egypt, according to the Italian foreign ministry and Egyptian security sources.
The Italian foreign ministry confirmed on Monday that at least five Italian nationals were among those taken in the south of the country.
"Foreign Minister Franco Frattini... is following the matter of the kidnapping in Egypt of a group of foreigners including five Italians," the ministry said in a statement.

Frattini, who was informed of the kidnapping while en route to the United States, is in "close contact" with a crisis unit set up at the foreign ministry and other foreign ministries involved, the statement said.
Al Jazeera's Amr el-Kahky, reporting from Cairo, Egypt's capital, said that an official from Egypt's southern al-Wadi al-Jadid governorate, said the other people seized were seven Egyptians, five Germans and one Romanian.
"This is a gang act [by] masked men," Zoheir Garrana, the Egyptian tourism minister, said, adding that talks were under way on a ransom to release the abductees.
Mustapha Tawfiq, chief of police in the southern city of Aswan, told state television that four men abducted the group near Gilf el-Kabir, an uninhabited region near the borders with Libya and Sudan.
Egyptian sources said the kidnappers had asked for between four and six million dollars in ransom, although it was not possible to confirm the sum.
Police protection
Al Jazeera's El-Kahky said that it was believed the victims were taken to northern Sudan across Egypt's border.
"The south of the country has been very safe, we haven't seen such events in the past few years," he said.
"The last time something like this happened was in 1997, but the country's south has been very safe and every tourist convoy is escorted by policemen."
Garrana confirmed that the hostages "had been moved outside the Egyptian borders".
Israel denied that any of its nationals were among those kidnapped.
"According to our sources, there were no Israelis," Ygal Palmor, the foreign ministry spokesman, told the AFP news agency.
Earlier this month, Israel warned its citizens of a "very high" risk of kidnapping or attacks if they travel to Jordan or Egypt, the only two Arab countries which have made peace with the Jewish state.
Jewish holidayThe warning came just weeks before Jewish New Year holiday, which is marked this year on September 30 and October 1, when thousands of Israelis usually flock to Egypt's Sinai peninsula.
In 1997, at least 58 people were killed in Egypt when armed men opened fire on foreign tourists in the ancient temple city of Luxor, just north of Aswan.
More recently there was a spate of attacks in resorts on the Red Sea in the Sinai peninsula.
In April 2006, 20 people were killed in bomb blasts in Dahab, while 70 were killed in Sharm el-Sheikh in July 2005 and 34 people were killed in Taba in October 2004.
Source : Al Jazeera

U.S. Backs Reign of Crime and Death in Somalia

Medeshi
Written by Chris Floyd
Sunday, 21 September 2008
Pirates of the Horn: U.S. Backs Reign of Crime and Death in Somalia

The civilian death count from the American-backed "regime change" operation in Somalia is approaching 10,000, with more than 800 killed in the Terror War slaughter since June.
The figures, compiled by the Elman Peace and Human Rights Organization in Mogadishu, are almost certainly an undercount, given the rampant chaos that has ravaged the country in the wake of the Ethiopian invasion, and the Muslim practice of quick burial of the dead. But they are horrific enough, especially when added to another statistic released by the United Nations last month: 3.7 million Somalis are now in need of outside aid in order to survive. This is more than one-third of the entire population.
I have written often of what is happening in Somalia, and the American government's direct role in it, and the total silence of America's bipartisan political establishment about this vast atrocity. I won't recapitulate the horror and terror -- and American complicity -- here at the moment, but links to many of these pieces can be found in this recent post.
Meanwhile, a new piece in The Times is worth noting. It is offered as a sidebar to a larger story on the continuing plague of piracy based in Somalia, but it contains some telling facts and a good capsule description of the origins of the Terror War operation.
For one thing, it notes something that is almost never mentioned in any story about Somalia, neither in the very rare stories about the conflict itself or the rather more numerous stories about piracy and its effects on commercial shipping (an issue far more important that the lives of 10,000 innocent human beings, of course): the fact that the main backers and bankrollers of the vicious pirate gangs "are linked to the Western-backed government."
The conservative UK paper then goes on to give an accurate account of how these pirate-backing factions came to power -- facts that are almost universally ignored by the "liberal" American media . (Not to mention the "progressive blogosphere;" indeed, you can actually find more references to the Somalia war in the corporate press than among our internet "dissidents."):

"Years of violence, neglect and misguided policies have left Somalia one of the most dangerous countries and a breeding ground for the pirates attacking one of the world’s busiest shipping routes.

"Today the northeast area of the country, including Puntland, has been carved up by warlords who finance themselves by drug and gun running. This is also the heartland of the pirates, whose main backers are linked to the Western-backed government. Radical Islamists control much of the south, including the key port of Kismayo and the porous border area with Kenya, a staunch Western ally.

"This has realised a Western nightmare, which was supposed to have been destroyed by Ethiopia’s American-backed invasion of Somalia two years ago in support of a puppet government created by the international community. That alliance spanned the spectrum from extreme radicals to moderate, devout Muslims. The latter were in charge.

"Everyone – except Pentagon planners, it seems – knew that Somalia had never proved fertile territory for Saudi-style radical Islam. However, indiscriminate bombing of civilian areas by Ethiopia, Somalia’s historic enemy, with huge casualties, put an end to that. The Islamists were driven out, the moderates went into exile and the hardliners took control of the south with a popular powerbase beyond their wildest dreams."

A puppet government, installed by foreign invasion, riddled with crime and corruption, alienating and radicalizing the population: here we see the quintessential template of the "War on Terror," replicated faithfully in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Somalia -- and soon, perhaps, in Pakistan.
Mass death, mass ruin and immeasurable human suffering: this is what the War on Terror does. This is what the War on Terror is all about. It can have no other outcome. When someone supports the War on Terror -- as Barack Obama, John McCain, Sarah Palin and Joe Biden all do, with eagerness and enthusiasm -- this is what they are embracing. They are dipping their hands in innocent blood.


Somalia voids airline licenses

Medeshi
By presstv.ir Sep 22, 2008
Somalia's government has cancelled licenses of the four business airlines operating in Aden Abdulle International Airport, a Press TV report says.
(Photo: Mogadishu airport)
The four airlines, Jubba, Dallo, African and Glad had cancelled all flights to and from Mogadishu since midnight Tuesday after al-Shabaab fighters, affiliated to the Union of the Islamic Courts (UIC), shut down the airport saying it was being used to facilitate the presence of occupying Ethiopian forces, a Press TV correspondent reported Friday.
Government officials had called for an urgent meeting with the four airlines' officials Friday afternoon. During the session they were ordered to hand over their operating licenses issued to them by the government, the report said.
They were told that if they stopped their flights to and from Mogadishu on the orders of al-Shabaab, and if they think al-Shabaab is the government, then they should approach them and claim their licenses from them, our correspondent quoted one official as saying.

Watery Diarhoea breaks out in Burao , Somaliland

Medeshi 22 Sept , 208
Authorities in Burao in the republic of Somaliland are struggling to contain an outbreak of watery diarrhoea, medical sources said on 22 September.
"The outbreak began on 13 September and so far we have registered 261 cases and no fatalities," Adan Ilmi Diriye, the regional medical officer, told IRIN.
The biggest one-day caseload was on 13 September, with 92 cases, he said, adding, "so far today we have registered 16 cases".
Diriye blamed the outbreak on contaminated water drawn from wells in the area. "We had rains and we suspect the problem is the water people are drinking has been contaminated."
A task-force consisting of local authorities and aid agencies based in Burao, chaired by the regional medical officer, has been set up to deal with the outbreak. An awareness campaign was also under way.
"We are using every avenue to reach people," Diriye added. "Even the mosques have been involved in passing information to avoid contracting the disease."
Two wards in Burao general hospital were being used as a treatment centre. "If we feel we need to use a bigger place we will set it up, "he said.
As part of the efforts to contain the outbreak, Diriye said: "We have started chlorination of water wells and we are distributing water purification tablets directly to families in affected areas."
The worst-affected parts of the city were the October and Jarmalka neighbourhoods.
Diriye said the Somaliland government had sent enough drugs to deal with the problem and "we are changing our plans day to day to stay on top of it and be prepared if the situation gets worse".
He said there was no sign of a slowdown. "I am, however, confident that with our awareness campaigns and the work of the task-force, we will be able to contain it."
Source : IRIN

We are yet to meet! (Article 3 of 3) By: Yoshia MORISHITA

Medeshi 22 Sept , 2008
We are yet to meet! (Article 3 of 3) By: Yoshia MORISHITA
In my last two articles I mainly talked about my own experiences with Somali people. In this last article I will write a little bit about how the Somali region and people are generally perceived in Japan. It is probably fair to say the most of the visitors to this web site are Somali and assume that they do not have any Japanese friends or acquaintances. Likewise none of my friends and acquaintances in Japan has never even seen any Somali person. It is as if Japanese and Somali were living in different worlds in the same world.
What do Japanese people know about the Somali region? What do Japanese people think about it? What do they hear about it if they do at all? I believe a lot of people have at least heard of the word ‘Somalia’ but that is all and very few people know about the region, its location and people. In the first place the Japanese newspapers cover very few stories from there. For historic, economic, political and other reasons Japanese people pay more attention to Asian countries and the US than other regions of the world. Japan and Somalia are simply very far from each other. In fact, the vast majority of Japanese people take Africa as a whole except for Ethiopia, Kenya and a few others because they have excellent athletes (there are even students from these countries ‘studying’ at Japanese private universities on scholarship; their primary job is to run in marathons representing the universities).
Yet occasionally there is some news about the Somali region although it is mostly about violent conflicts, the threat of pirates near Somalia, and similar negative stories. Probably the last time we actually saw the towns in Somalia on TV was when the Tsunami in Indonesia also killed fishermen in Somalia (by the way ‘Tsunami’ is a Japanese word, which means huge waves at the port/shore).
Some others might have seen a film entitled Blackhawk Down and a picture of an American soldier whose dead body was pulled around by car (the Japanese Army recommend the film to its soldiers just to show how difficult it can be to fight in the actual battle field, definitely NOT for blaming the Somalis; the majority of the viewers of this film may not know the scene is in the Somali region).
Moreover, second hand car buyers from the Somali region visit Japan and sometimes ask us about Toyota Landcruiser and Nissan Hilux. One of the buyers jokingly told me that the rebels would buy these cars and cut off the roof of the car to mount machine guns!
All these put together, even to most of Japanese people who are relatively well informed, the Somali region is a place to assist with peace building, a place somewhere in Africa to keep away from because it is dangerous, or quite possibly a place they have no idea about. Consequently there is hardly anyone with whom I can enjoy talking about Somalia, which is a little sad for me to accept because I want to be more familiar with the Somali region where some of my friends originally come from.
In a nutshell, Japan may seem too far and too different from the Somali region. This is certainly true but there are good things as well. One day if Japanese and Somali meet, we can probably be good friends. Why? This is because Japan is not like typical Western countries where Somalis can get insulted because of their country of origin or religious belief (this is what I hear). Japan has very limited relations with Africa as a whole and there are few Africans in Japan and almost no immigrants. Believe it or not, Africans in general are warmly welcome here. People here will even say to you, ‘Welcome! You travelled all the way from Africa. Thank you for coming!’ This means that there will be no barrier to the initial contact.
Moreover Japan is certainly not a Muslim country but almost all Muslims who visit Japan say Japan is a more Muslim country than any other ‘officially’ Muslim country. This is because of its cleanliness and the way people behave in public places, according to Muslim visitors to Japan. Also most of Japanese people are not familiar with Islam and so do not discriminate against Muslims; they can be curious but do not offend you. Why not come to see it for yourself? I am afraid there is no khat to chew available but there are masjids and Halal food shops in the major cities of Japan, including our city!
We are very far apart but I am one of the few in Japan, thinking of Somali people all the time, hoping others will also know about Somali-related issues! We Japanese and Somalis will meet in the near future!
Thank you for reading my articles! Wishing you all good health!
END
About the writer:
(Mr) Yoshia MORISHITA is a Japanese national who studied and worked in the UK, as well as Turkey and Eritrea. He has visited around 25 countries of the world and developed his international perspectives. He has a Master’s degree in International Development from UCL, University of London and worked as a research associate at a British NGO. Currently he is living in Japan running a small business in the area of various international programmes and businesses facilitation and co-ordination, while reading sociology at Hokkaido University.

A new book about the life and the poetry of Haji Aden Af Qaloo


Medeshi 22 Sept , 2008


A new book about the life and poetry of Haji Aden Af Qaloo
HAL AAN TEBAYEY: Baal-taariikheedkii Af-qallooc iyo Gabayadiisii
Hal Aan Tebayey ( The One I Yearned For Most) waxa uu ka kooban yahay afar qaybood oo xidhiidhsan iyo lifaaqyo ku taxmaya.

Qaybta koowaad waxa ay ka hadlaysaa Xaajiga iyo noloshiisii carruurnimo, hanaqaadkiisii iyo noloshiisii qurbaha; mar libaax qawlallada ku lalansado oo habeen qoyskooda ka dhex qaato, mar loox badda ka soo caaryey la sabbeeyo oo moolka badda caano-maallo kula dibjiro, mar niman shisheeye ah oo doonyo wataa qabsadaan oo kaxaystaan oo sannad badhkii la maqnaadaan, iyada oo qoyskiisu aanu u hayn war iyo wacaal halka uu inankoodii ku dambeeyey, wax laga samro oo raq iyo ruux la waayo meel uu jaan iyo cidhib dhigay, mar doonniyi badda kula halliganto, wax uu kolba markab khankiisa hoose ku dhuunto oo waddan kale laga soo qabto oo dib loo masaafuriyo, mar shufto meel u gasho oo dagaal gondihiisa ka dhasho, wax kolba la xidho oo dil lagu xukumo iyo wax uu bado iyo dhulal u kala goosho oo aqoon, magac, maskab iyo maal gacantiisa ku taabo ilaa uu isaga oo toddobaatanka is daba mariyey waddankiisa ku soo laabanayo, kana bilaabayo gayllankiisii gobannimo-doonka ahaa.

Qaybta labaad ee buuggu waxa ay ka xog bixinaysaa halgankaas xornimo raadinta iyo gabayadii Xaajiga ee dareenka kulul ee waddannimo, aqoonta dheer iyo waaya-aragnimada ka soo jeedda ilbaxnimooyinka badan huwanaa.

Qaybta saddexaadna waxa ay ku saabsan tahay waayihii gobannimada la qaatay iyo dawladihii rayadka ama sibilka ahaa ee talada u kala dambeeyey sagaalkii sannadood ee gobannimada ka dib. Waxa qaybtan loogu tegayaa suugaan halis ah oo duruufihii xilligaas ka curatay, badankeeduna la jaanqaadayso waayahan haddeerto la joogo oo aad moodaysid in iminka la tirinayo.

Qaybta afraadna waa xilligii kacaannimada dawladdii ciidamadu hoggaaminayeen ee Maxamed Siyaad Barre horjoogaha u ahaa. Waxa dabadeed raacaya lifaaq sawireed ku saabsan qayb ka mid ah tafiirtii Xaaji Aadan Axmed (Af-qallooc). Lixdan maanso oo Xaaji Aadan Af-qallooc leeyahay oo intooda badani dhammaystiran yihiin ayaa buuggu koobayaa. Gabay kasta waxa ka horreeya hordhac ku saabsan ujeeddada nuxurkiisa, munaasibaddii uu ka curtay iyo goortii uu gabaygu soo baxay.

Qoraaga buuggan la magac baxay Hal Aan Tebayey ee Baal-taariikheedka iyo Gabayadii abwaankii qayuurka ahaa Alle ha u naxariisto’e Xaaji Aadan Axmed Xasan (Af-qalloc), waxa uu hore u soo saaray labada buug ee kala ah: Hal Ka Haleel oo laga qoray Sooyaalka Hadraawi iyo Suugaantiisa iyo Guri Waa Haween oo ka xog warramaya Kartida Haweenka Soomaalida.


In laga yidhi Xaaji Aadan (Af-qallooc), Maansadiisa iyo Buuggiisan

Shakhsiyadda, Alle ha u naxariistee, Xaaji Aadan Axmed Xasan, waxaa laga baran karaa maansadiisa iyo taariikh-nololeedkiisa. Runtii waa shakhsiyad gooni ah oo la yaab leh. Waxaynu maansadiisa ugu tegaynaa waddan jacayl, qiiro iyo ficilo dareen kulul oo Soomaalinnimo ah leh, han iyo hirasho mustaqbal gobannimo Soomaaliyeed ah, hal-adayg iyo geesinnimo mabda’ ku dhisan; aqoon, cilmi iyo waayo-aragnimo dheeraad ah oo aan badiba faciis kula mid ahayn.

Waxa uu lahaa naf lahasho badan iyo caqli meel fog iyo wax meel ku maqan daba taagan oo wax kasta oo uu ka haleelo iyo heer kasta oo uu ka gaadho, marna ba aan gunteeda soo taabanaynin ka na haqab-beeleynin. Marka uu hir ka gaadhoba mid kale ayaa u sii muuqda, markaas ayuu halkii uu joogay ka sii hiyi-kacaa oo socod u xidh-xidhaa.

Waxaa uu daba socday aqoon, waayo-aragnimo iyo cilmi oo intuba ah wax aan guntooda la gaadhin. Haddii marar badan dhul shisheeye lagu xidhay ama dhac iyo dagaallo ku qabsadeen ama dil qudh-gooyo ah loo soo taagay, marar kale na wanaag buu haleelay oo maal, mansab iyo magac ba wuu gaadhay; ha yeeshee mid walba wuu ka dhaqaaqay oo wixii mar walba riixayey baa ka diray. Sannado aad u badan ayuu tii uu haleelo ba ka kordhi oo tu kale na ku sii dar lahaa, ilaa ay da’i ka daba timid.

Halgan dheer oo ilaa saddex toban-guuro soconayey wuxuu inagu dhaxalsiiyey oo uu- Alle ha u raxmadee- inooga tegey murti aan gaboobayn. Maxamed Baashe Xaaji Xasan, waajib ina wada saarraa buu inaga rogay, markii uu hawsha diiwaanka maansada Xaaji Aadan doortay in uu soo saaro. La’aantii suugaantaasi lumid bay ku dambayn lahayd.

Rashiid Sheekh Cabdillaahi X. Axmed (Gadhweyne)
Xeeldheere Cilmibaadha Arrimaha Dhaqanka, Afka iyo Suugaanta Soomaalida,
Sheffield, Aug. 2008

Waxa aan ka mid ahay inta qiraysa ee aqoonsan in Xaaji Aadan Axmed Xasan (Af-qallooc) ahaa halyey aan gabyaa qudha ahayn, hase yeeshee waddani waxgarada ahaa. Waxa uu aaminsanaa ayaa taariikhdiisa iyo suugaantiisaba wax ka dhigaysa, isagana nooli iyo jiscin u noqonaysa.

Suugaanta Xaaji Aadan waxa ay ka mid tahay suugaanta hiddaha ee dadka ka wada dhaxaysa ee aan loo eegi karin, shuqulkana ku lahayn reero iyo gobollo toona. Waa suugaan uu qof kastaa aqbali karo. Qof kastaa manaafacaadsan karo, qof kastaana wax ka korodhsan karo. Gabyaaga sifadaas leh iyo qof kasta oo dhaxal san ka tagaaba, marka uu geeriyoodo waxa uu xaq u leeyahay in la qiimeeyo oo xurmadiisa la siiyo. Qofnimadiisii, wixii uu aaminsanaa iyo wax soo saarkiisii buu ka tegey oo yaalla oo ammaano ku ah inta nool, xilna ka saaran yahay ilaalinteeda iyo dayactirkeeda.

Suugaanta Xaaji Aadan Axmed Xasan (Af-qallooc) waxa ay la noolaanaysaa ‘wiilka wiilkiis’ inta dunida guudkeeda lagu dhaqan yahay, isna (Xaajiguna) waxa uu noqonayaa qof la hadal hayo oo quluubta dadka ku jira oo jiil kasta la noolaada. Waayo waxa uu ka tegey ee dadka dhex yaalla ayaa noqonaya wax lagu xasuusto iyo wax lagu xushmeeyo labadaba.

Abwaan Maxamed Ibraahim Warsame (Hadraawi)
London, Jan. 2008

Xaaji Aadan Axmed (Af-qallooc) wuxu ahaa “jaadgooni” bini aadamka dhif iyo naadir lagu arko. Waxa uu ahaa nin cimriga, caqliga, carrabka iyo caafimaadkaba barako iyo hoodo Alle u geliyey. Isaga oo 80-ka ah ama dhaafay oo jooga gedaha uu dadku ku talaxgabo, ayuu bilaabay dardar iyo olole hor leh oo gobannimo u dirir ah oo 30-jirka ku adag inuu u badheedho. Isaga oo 100-jir ah ama dhaafay (waa da’da maskaxda irmaani dhaqayo noqoto ama gudhoba), ayuu soo daayey durdurro murti iyo ilhaam ah oo aad mooddo qaarkood waxyaabo maanta taagan inay ka hadlayaan.

Soomaalidu waxa ay ku maahmaahdaa “Nimaan dhul marini dhaaya la’”. Xaaji Aadan, Alle ha u naxariisto’e, dhul keliya ma marin ee wuxuu maray dhulal – Qoorriyada Maarseey ilaa iyo Qubanaha Jasiiradaha Indonesia. Waxa uu ka kasbay dhaayo waaya-aragnimo oo ka dhex iftiimaya murtida gabay iyo maansada dhaxal galka ah ee uu uga tegey intii Af-soomaali ku hadasha ee ku dhaadata.

Qoraaga Maxamed Baashe Xaaji Xasan oo wax soo saarka qalinkiisu aanu inagu cusbayn, wuxuu mar kale muujiyey karti iyo xilqaad lagu bogaadiyo iyo inuu leeyahay awood qoraagu aanu ka maarmin oo ah adkaysanka iyo u dhabaradayga xilka qoraalka. Waa in nafta geed lagu xidhaa, waana mid uu Maxamed Baashe markan iyo marar horeba sameeyey.

Maxamuud Sheekh Axmed Dalmar
Taariikhyahan, Suxufi Ruugcaddaa ah,
London, Aug. 2008

"Buuggani wuxuu dhidibada u taagay dhaxalkii uu inooga tegey Xaaji Aadan Axmed (Af-qallooc), waana diiwaan la nool, lana noolaan doona dhacdooyin nolosheenna raad ku leh"

Naadiga Akhristayaasha Hargeysa,
Akhristayaasha Maanta; Qorayaashii Berrito
Hargeysa, Aug. 2008


Laga bilaabo bisha Oktoobar ee sannadkan 2008, waxa buuggan laga dalban karaa:
mohamedbashe@hotmail.com

Ethiopia hiding famine to starve the Somalis (Pics from Channel 4 Doc)























































Trapped in the middle of a war, Muslim ethnic Somalis face starvation.
Here, starvation threatens as people go days without food.
Channel 4 News has learned it's not just the failure of crops that's to blame - it's also the Ethiopian army.Channel 4 News travelled into the Ogaden desert, where most of the inhabitants are Muslim ethnic Somalis, trapped in the middle of a war between rebels fighting for independence and the Ethiopian army.
In the vast deserts of the Ogaden the rains have failed for three years and the animals are dying in their thousands. The UN and the Ethiopian government say they are trying to avert starvation, but deep in the bush the people say they have seen no food - and that the Ethiopian army are deliberately starving people to death.According to the nomads, who are so hungry they are harvesting dead leaves and buds, the military are the only people who receive food.

S Africa's Mbeki agrees to quit

Medeshi Sept 20, 2008
S Africa's Mbeki agrees to quit
Thabo Mbeki, the South African president, has accepted a call from the governing African National Congress (ANC) to step down, according to his spokesman.Mukoni Ratshitanga told 702 Talk Radio in Johannesburg, the commercial capital, on Saturday that Mbeki would convene a special government meeting the following day to decide the way forward.
"The president has accepted the decision of the ANC's national executive council," Ratshitanga said. Mbeki, 66, who succeeded Nelson Mandela as president in June 1999, has been facing criticism over allegations that he was influential in pressing corruption charges against Jaco Zuma, the ANC leader and his political rival.
The ANC announced after two days of talks on Saturday that it was recalling Mbeki, who is just months away from completing his full-term term of office.
A court ruling, handed down on September 12, cleared Zuma of corruption charges, alleging that Mbeki's government had interfered in the decision to prosecute him, which Mbeki's cabinet has denied.Speculation
After the ruling, there was intense speculation over whether the ANC would ask Mbeki to quit, push him out in a vote of no confidence or allow him to serve out his term of office.
Al Jazeera's Bernard Smith, reporting from Johannesburg, said "it looks like the beginning of the end for Thabo Mbeki".
He quoted Gwede Mantashe, the ANC's secretary-general, as saying that when the party told Mbeki what it had decided, his reaction was normal and that he did not display any shock or any depression.Mbeki agreed that he was going to take part in the processs to remove him as president, Smith said quoting Mantashe."It seems like Mbeki is not going to fight this," Smith said. "It looks like he is going to end up resigning and then parliament will appoint a new president who will be in place until scheduled elections are called as early as April - between April and June - next year."
The ANC appeared unable to reach a decision on the issue at a meeting on Friday and cancelled a news conference where officials had been scheduled to announce their decision.
"The debate is actually in the middle of nowhere. Everybody is expressing their view and then when we complete that debate and take a decision we will come and communicate with you," Mantashe said.
Mbeki challenged
After the ruling in Zuma's trial, the ANC youth league called for Mbeki to leave but the ANC as a whole reacted more cautiously, saying any decision would be by consensus and announced after its national executive committee had met over the weekend.
Half the cabinet is reportedly threatening to walk out if Mbeki is forced to leave.
Mbeki issued a statement on Friday saying: "It impoverishes our society that some resort to the tactic of advancing allegations with no fact to support these.
"The question will have to be answered now - what kind of society are we building, informed by what value system and with what long-term effect to the political and overall moral health of the nation?"
The dismissal of corruption charges against Zuma makes it possible for him to become South Africa's president after next year's election.

Life in Somalia's pirate town

Life in Somalia’s pirate town
BBC
Mary Harper
Whenever word comes out that pirates have taken yet another ship in the Somali region of Puntland, extraordinary things start to happen.
Pirate attacks off the coast of Somalia have been surging
There is a great rush to the port of Eyl, where most of the hijacked vessels are kept by the well-armed pirate gangs.
People put on ties and smart clothes. They arrive in land cruisers with their laptops, one saying he is the pirates’ accountant, another that he is their chief negotiator.
With yet more foreign vessels seized off the coast of Somalia this week, it could be said that hijackings in the region have become epidemic.
Insurance premiums for ships sailing through the busy Gulf of Aden have increased tenfold over the past year because of the pirates, most of whom come from the semi-autonomous region of Puntland.
In Eyl, there is a lot of money to be made, and everybody is anxious for a cut.Entire industry
The going rate for ransom payments is between $300,000 and $1.5m (£168,000-£838,000).
A recent visitor to the town explained how, even though the number of pirates who actually take part in a hijacking is relatively small, the whole modern industry of piracy involves many more people.
“The number of people who make the first attack is small, normally from seven to 10,” he said.
“They go out in powerful speedboats armed with heavy weapons. But once they seize the ship, about 50 pirates stay on board the vessel. And about 50 more wait on shore in case anything goes wrong.”
Given all the other people involved in the piracy industry, including those who feed the hostages, it has become a mainstay of the Puntland economy.
Eyl has become a town tailor-made for pirates - and their hostages.
Special restaurants have even been set up to prepare food for the crews of the hijacked ships.
As the pirates want ransom payments, they try to look after their hostages.
When commandos from France freed two French sailors seized by pirates off the Somali coast this week, President Nicolas Sarkozy said he had given the go-ahead for the operation when it was clear the pirates were headed for Eyl - it would have been too dangerous to try to free them from there.
The town is a safe-haven where very little is done to stop the pirates - leading to the suggestion that some, at least, in the Puntland administration and beyond have links with them.
Many of them come from the same clan - the Majarteen clan of the president of Somalia’s transitional federal government, Abdullahi Yusuf.
Money to spend
The coastal region of Puntland is booming.
Fancy houses are being built, expensive cars are being bought - all of this in a country that has not had a functioning central government for nearly 20 years.
Observers say pirates made about $30m from ransom payments last year - far more than the annual budget of Puntland, which is about $20m.
When the president of Puntland, Adde Musa, was asked about the reported wealth of pirates and their associates, he said: “It’s more than true”.
Now that they are making so much money, these 21st Century pirates can afford increasingly sophisticated weapons and speedboats.
This means that unless more is done to stop them, they will continue to plunder the busy shipping lanes through the Gulf of Aden.
They even target ships carrying aid to feed their compatriots - up to a third of the population.
Warships from France, Canada and Malaysia, among others, now patrol the Somali coast to try and fend off pirate attacks.
An official at the International Maritime Organisation explained how the well-armed pirates are becoming increasingly bold.
More than 30% of the world’s oil is transported through the Gulf of Aden, and even though the pirates lack the means to hijack huge tankers, there are reports that they have fired at them.
“It is only a matter of time before something horrible happens,” said the official.
“If the pirates strike a hole in the tanker, and there’s an oil spill, there could be a huge environmental disaster”.
It is likely that piracy will continue to be a problem off the coast of Somalia as long as the violence and chaos continues on land.
Conflict can be very good for certain types of business, and piracy is certainly one of them.
Weapons are easy to obtain and there is no functioning authority to stop them, either on land or at sea.

Ethiopia starving despite the Blue Nile

Medeshi Sept 20, 2008
Despite the Blue Nile , UN says drought worsening in Ethiopian restive region
ADDIS ABABA (AFP) -- The United Nations warned that a shortage of food and water was worsening the effects of a searing drought in Ethiopia's restive Somali region.
""The overall humanitarian situation in the region has worsened due to progressive shortages of water and food,"" the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said in a statement.
""Food and water shortages have reached critical levels in many areas of the region leading to increased rural-urban migration.""
The agency, citing aid workers, said five administrative zones in the region, also called Ogaden, are affected because of ongoing military operations against the rebel Ogaden National Liberation Front.
Authorities have denied as exaggerated charges by aid groups that the military operation has hampered delivery of aid to the region, neighboring lawless Somalia.
In early September, UN humanitarian chief John Holmes called on Ethiopia to grant aid agencies more access in the conflict zone.
Ethiopia's military launched the crackdown last year after the ONLF, a ethnic-based separatist group, attacked a Chinese-run oil venture, killing 77 people.
According to OCHA, some 4.6 million people in Ethiopia need emergency assistance while another eight million require immediate food relief due to the drought.

Qaar ka mid ah Ururada Bulshada Rayidka ah oo walaac ka muujiyay mudo dhaafka golayaasha deegaanada

Annaga oo ah Ururada Bulshada Rayidka ah ee Madaxa-banaan waxaanu si wayn uga walaacsanahay