Ethiopia Will Suspend Power Exports to Neighbors, Reporter Says


Medeshi Dec 30, 2008
Ethiopia Will Suspend Power Exports to Neighbors, Reporter Says
By Jason McLure
(Bloomberg) -- Ethiopia will suspend electricity exports to neighboring Sudan and Djibouti while it deals with a local shortage because of delays in completing new power projects, the Reporter said.
Ethiopia’s state-run electricity utility, which produces between 700 and 800 megawatts of electricity, faces a 100- megawatt shortfall due to growing demand and delays in the construction of new hydropower dams, the Addis Ababa-based newspaper said, citing Energy Minister Alemayehu Tegenu.
Construction of the Tekeze dam in northern Ethiopia, on a tributary of the Blue Nile River, has been delayed because the ground on which it was being built wasn’t strong enough, the report said. A second hydropower facility in southern Ethiopia has been delayed for over a year because a boring machine digging a 26-kilometer (16-mile) tunnel has been stuck underground, it said.
Ethiopia signed memorandums of understanding with Sudan and Djibouti to export power and is completing a feasibility study to send power to Kenya. The country plans to build as many as nine new dams over the next 10 years.

U.S. Losing 'Secret' War in Somalia

Medeshi
U.S. Losing 'Secret' War in Somalia
By David Axe December 30, 2008
For several years the U.S. military has fought a covert war in Somalia, using gunships, drones and Special Forces to break up suspected terror networks -- and enlisting Ethiopia's aid in propping up a pro-U.S. "transitional" government. It's a relatively unknown front in the "war on terror," and one where the U.S. and its allies are losing ground, fast.
Two years ago, the U.S. military fought alongside Ethiopian troops in a lightning-fast armored assault deep into Somalia aimed at destroying the Islamic government, which the Pentagon suspected of harboring Al Qaeda operatives. Today the Islamists are back, waging a brutal insurgency that has killed thousands of people and steadily gained ground against the occupying Ethiopians and their allies in the transitional government.
Last week, taking advantage of a power struggle inside the transitional government, the Islamists pushed to within five miles of Mogadishu, previously an Ethiopian and government stronghold. Just goes to show: the political front can be one of the most important in modern counter-insurgency campaigns.
The escalating fighting has all sorts of ramifications. U.N. food convoys feeding half the country (mostly with U.S.-donated food) have been disrupted. And efforts to create a Somali judiciary capable of prosecuting piracy cases have been sidelined.
While security in Iraq has improved by the day, Somalia and Afghanistan continue their slides into chaos, on Washington's watch.
WIRED

The US Role in Somalia's Calamity
By Chris Albin-Lackey
Pirates have put Somalia back on the international agenda, but Somalia's people have yet to receive as much protection as the international tankers off-shore. The brutal, widely ignored conflict in Somalia has crept back into the headlines only after spawning a massive humanitarian crisis and Islamist extremism, as well as piracy. But to deal with these issues, the Obama administration will have to break with failed policies that have helped push Somalia into calamity.
Two years ago Somalia stood at a crossroads. After 16 anarchic years without a government, a coalition of Islamic courts had taken control of the capital, Mogadishu, bringing both ominously harsh rule and unprecedented stability. But Somalia's powerful neighbor Ethiopia saw the rise of the bellicose courts as a threat to its national security, and the Bush administration accused the Islamic courts leadership of harboring terrorism suspects -- including individuals suspected of plotting the 1998 US Embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania. When Ethiopia intervened militarily to crush the Islamic courts in December 2006, Washington supported its operation.
The last two years have been an unmitigated disaster for the people of Somalia. The conflict pits the Ethiopian forces and Somalia's ineffectual, internationally backed transitional government against a powerful but fragmented insurgency. All sides have routinely committed war crimes and serious human rights abuses. I have interviewed young girls raped by militiamen from the transitional government; mothers whose children were cut to pieces by indiscriminate Ethiopian bombardment; and common laborers shot in the streets by insurgent fighters who saw them as unsupportive of their cause.
Thousands of civilians have been killed, more than a million people are displaced from their homes, and millions of people teeter at the edge of famine. Aid workers, who had managed to assist Somali communities even during the most lawless periods before 2006, have been the targets of dozens of killings and kidnappings in 2008 and now watch helplessly from neighboring Kenya as the situation spirals out of control.
America's most visible response to the crisis has been a series of air strikes against terrorism suspects that have mostly killed civilians. The air strikes--and the way in which US officials have ignored overwhelming evidence of Ethiopian and transitional government war crimes -- have fueled anti-American sentiment.
US policy not only has displayed a callous disregard for the basic human rights of Somalis, but it has failed on its own terms, breeding the very extremism it sought to eliminate. Drawing on widespread hostility to the Ethiopian intervention and resentment of the abuses, insurgents loosely grouped under the banner of a group called Al-Shabaab ("youth") have become the most powerful military force on the ground. Al-Shabaab's leaders preach a kind of Islamist extremism that had never managed to take root in Somalia before the nightmare of the last two years. Meanwhile attacks at sea by Somali pirates have grown, unchecked, a product of the lawless chaos that prevails on land. Ethiopia says its battered military will soon withdraw, leaving US policymakers desperate to empower relatively moderate Somali opposition leaders to fill the vacuum.
The Somali crisis is also a regional problem. Tens of thousands of civilians are fleeing into fragile Kenya, which now has the world's largest concentration of refugees, and thousands more face abuses or even death on dangerous journeys across the Gulf of Aden to Yemen. And the unresolved border conflict between Eritrea and Ethiopia continues to exacerbate regional tension, with each government supporting opposing sides in Somalia.
The Obama administration has an opportunity to bring a fresh approach to this escalating, complex crisis. It will have to weigh diplomatic initiatives involving all the countries in the region, the viability of the transitional government forces and peacekeeping forces in Somalia, and the role of the United States military. Accountability for the serious abuses that underpin both the suffering of Somalia's people and the growth of violent extremism is only one element in these challenges, but it is critical. It will mean publicly demanding accountability from all of the parties responsible for war crimes on the ground -- including Ethiopia, Washington's most important strategic ally in the region. The US relationship with Ethiopia is important, but complacency toward war crimes in Somalia will undermine US efforts to address the broader crisis.
There is no easy solution to Somalia, but Washington can show that it is ready to address the challenge by quickly appointing a high-level US envoy on the Horn of Africa and supporting a UN commission of inquiry to investigate the most serious crimes. These steps cannot undo the damage failed US policies have caused in Somalia but they would send the message that the Obama administration is moving in a new and more principled direction.

One Somalilander among Seven Africans Begin Rotary World Peace Fellowships


Medeshi Dec 30, 2008
Giving Peace a Chance: Seven Africans Begin Rotary World Peace Fellowships
EVANSTON, Illinois
Amid daily headlines of civil war, suicide attacks, ethnic violence and social unrest emerges some welcome positive news.
The Rotary Foundation of Rotary International -- a humanitarian service organization dedicated to world peace and understanding -- has awarded seven Africans to study peacemaking and conflict resolution at the Rotary Centers for International Studies located at leading universities in England, Japan, Australia, Argentina, and the United States.
The African fellows in the 2008-10 class hail from Somalia, Zambia, Gambia, Nigeria, Togo, Kenya and Sierra Leone.
Launched in 2002, this innovative approach to world peace is a master's level program aimed at equipping the next generation leaders with skills needed to reduce the threat of war and violence. The Peace Fellows are selected every year in a globally competitive process in which applicants must demonstrate a commitment to peace through their personal, academic and professional achievements.
Like the members of the classes preceding them, the 60 students in the 2008-10 class are a diverse group, representing 33 countries and an array of professional and cultural backgrounds. Their interests and areas of expertise include education, international law, economic development, journalism, and social justice. The seven African fellows are:


- Mahamoud Abdi Sheikh Ahmed of Borama, Somalia, a team leader with the
Norwegian Refugee Council in Somaliland, which provides basic
education to children of displaced families. Ahmed's own childhood was
interrupted by inter-clan violence, forcing his family to flee to
Ethiopia. Ahmed eventually returned to Borama, became a teacher and
manager and newscaster of a local TV station. He will attend the Rotary
Center at the University of Bradford, England.
- Elias Courson of Porthacourt, Nigeria, worked with the non-profit
organization "Our Niger Delta" to address community development and
conflict resolution. He believes that his Rotary Fellowship will sharpen
his understanding of the causes of conflicts in Nigeria and will prepare
him to work towards an implementation of humanitarian law standards in
Nigeria. He is attending the Rotary Center at the University of
California, Berkeley, USA.
- Murtala Touray of Bakau, Gambia, initiated the first national
civil society coalition in Gambia to observe the election process and
mobilize mass participation in voting. He is attending the Rotary Center
at the University of Bradford, England.
- Yawo Tekpa of Lome, Togo, had to flee his home country in 2002 to
avoid political persecution for his efforts towards student rights and
social justice. After gaining asylum in the United States he earned a
bachelor's degree in peace studies at the University of California,
Berkeley. Tekpa worked as an outreach coordinator for Amnesty
International. He is attending the Rotary Center at the University of
California Berkeley, USA.
- Teddy Foday-Musa of Freetown, Sierra Leone, founded the Sierra
Leonean chapter of the World Peace Prayer Society and has worked as a
teacher. It is his belief that peace and good governance are the gateway
for development of Sierra Leone and Africa as a continent. He is
attending the Rotary Center at the University of Queensland.
- Francis Kabosha of Mporokos, Zambia, has worked on projects to
address water preservation and malnutrition in his country as a member of
the District Development Coordination Committee and Southern African
Regional Disaster Response Team. He is attending the Rotary Center at the
University of Bradford.
- Joseph Hongo of Nairobi, Kenya, has worked with the AMANI Forum,
a nonprofit organization that advocates for dialogue and peaceful
conflict resolution and aims to organize Parliamentarians for sustainable
peace in the Great Lakes region. He is attending the Rotary Center at the
University of Queensland, Australia.


"One of my most memorable experiences was observing the peace negotiation between the government of Uganda and Lord's Resistance Army rebels in Juba," says Hongo, who most recently assessed the underlying issues of the post-election violence in Kenya. "The responsibility to bring this country to peace and tolerance rests with Kenyans. It may take long, be difficult and sometimes involve sacrifice of certain interests, but eventually all Kenyans will enjoy the fruits of their hard work, for generations to come."
In addition to the two-year program, the Rotary Center at the Chulalongkorn University in Bangkok offers an intensive, three-month course aimed at mid-level professionals in governments, NGOs, and international industry. After five sessions, 18 African professionals have completed the peace studies program in Thailand.
Liberian peace activist Richelieu Allison was a member of the first graduation class. He is the regional director of the West African Youth Network, a group that mobilizes and trains young people to restore peace and human rights in West Africa. Inspired by the peace fellowship program, he now plans to put what he has learned into practice. With the help of the Rotary Foundation and the Rotary Club of Freetown in Sierra Leone, Allison is organizing in March 2009 a three-week peace caravan through Liberia, Sierra Leone, Guinea and Ivory Coast.
"The aim of the caravan is to promote peace, unity and reconciliation in the war affected countries in West Africa and to increase the involvement of local people in the peace building process," says Allison.
Rotary Foundation Chair Jonathan Majiyagbe notes that 363 Rotary Center alumni, including 31 Africans, already are making a difference in key decision-making positions in governments and organizations around the world.
"It is this growing network of peace fellows that makes me believe that peace is possible and Africa will have a peaceful and prosperous future," said Majiyagbe, a lawyer from Kano, Nigeria.
Rotary is the world's largest privately funded source of international scholarships and has more than 30,000 Rotary clubs in over 200 countries and geographic regions. For more information visit www.rotary.org
Distributed by PR Newswire on behalf of Rotary International

SOMALIA: Fresh turmoil, uncertainty as president resigns

Medeshi
SOMALIA: Fresh turmoil, uncertainty as president resigns
NAIROBI, 29 December 2008 (IRIN) - Fresh turmoil and uncertainty loom for the people of Somalia - already ravaged by displacement, conflict, drought and hyper-inflation - after the country’s interim president resigned on 29 December.
Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed resigned after disagreements with parliament and his prime minister, as well as pressure from the international community.
"President Abdullahi Yusuf resigned at around 1000am local time. The speaker of parliament, Sheikh Aden Madobe, is now the acting president until a new one is elected," Abdi Haji Gobdon, the government spokesman told IRIN.
Gobdon said parliament had to elect a new president within 30 days, according to the interim constitution.
Yusuf's resignation comes days after the man he appointed as prime minister, Mohamed Mahamud Guled, resigned - in defiance of parliament.
Yusuf, a former warlord, was elected four years ago to a five-year term in the hope that he would bring peace and stability to the war-torn country.
According to local sources, Yusuf, in a resignation speech, told parliament he had failed to do so, and blamed both Somalis and the international community for his failure.

Clash with premier
Yusuf and the Prime Minister Nur Hassan Hussein had clashed over attempts to negotiate a peace deal with the Islamist-led armed opposition.
Yusuf was opposed to peace talks held in Djibouti which brought together representatives of the Transitional Federal Government (TFG) and a faction of the Eritrea-based opposition group, the Alliance for the Reliberation of Somalia (ARS), led by Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed.
The ex-president regarded these talks as "a plan to weaken his power", said a Somali political observer. "He saw the whole process as a way to sideline him."
According to the observer, Yusuf could still pose a serious obstacle to peace in the country. "He will most likely re-establish his political base in Puntland and use that as a bargaining chip."
A member of parliament in the Yusuf camp, who requested anonymity, told IRIN Yusuf was pressured into resigning by the international community.
"He was forced to resign and it will not lead to peace and stability," said the MP who was speaking from Galkayo, Yusuf's home town.
“Warlordism”
A Somali civil society source told IRIN Yusuf's departure would be positive if it meant the end of "warlordism" in the country.
"If it marks the end of a warlord era then it is positive and we welcome it."
He said the resignation should be accompanied by serious changes in the TFG "if anything positive is to come out of it".
A Nairobi-based regional analyst who preferred anonymity, welcomed Yusuf's resignation, calling it "very positive".
"This is a very positive and long-awaited step that removes impediments to the Djibouti peace process," he said, adding that considerable challenges remain.
He said the TFG and the Djibouti wing of ARS need to move quickly to form a broad-based government. "They need to move with greater urgency to form a unity government and bring in others opposed to the process."
Ethiopian forces
Many Somalis will remember Yusuf as the man who brought Ethiopian forces into Somalia, which led to a fierce insurgency and the displacement of over a million people.
Over the past couple of months, insurgents comprising Islamist Al-Shabab, nationalists and militia clans opposed to foreign forces, have taken control of more than a dozen localities, according to a local journalist.
The TFG has control only over Mogadishu and the town of Baidoa, 240km southwest of Mogadishu, where the parliament is based.
At least 16,000 Somalis died between 2007 and 2008 and more than 30,000 were injured, according to local human rights groups. According to the UN, 2.6 million Somalis need assistance. That number is expected to reach 3.5 million by the end of the year.
Somalia has the highest levels of malnutrition in the world, with up to 300,000 children acutely malnourished annually, according to the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF).
(Yusuf will be remembered as the man who brought Ethiopian forces into Somalia - file photo)

War Games: Children playing soldiers in Mogadishu


Medeshi Dec 28, 2008
War Games: Children playing soldiers in Mogadishu
I am trying to show the world what Somalia is," says Somali photographer Abubakar Albadri. "When you are a photographer in the field you cannot close your eyes and say I cannot take these and leave. You cannot cry. You must take what is there.
"In Mogadishu there are no social services and no infrastructure. A lot of children are playing war games instead of going to school. You can see them playing in the street: they divide themselves into three groups, the insurgents, the Ethiopian forces and the transitional government forces. Most of them usually like to take the role of the insurgents so that they can be the strong group, because they believe the transitional government forces are usually defeated.
"When they play they have some things filled with ash, and they throw those so they can show smoke and bombs. It is a pity because they are raw material for the fighting, because they already know how to fight. The indoctrination of the next generation of Somali fighters has already begun. I feel shame when I see these children and I can't do anything for them."
Abubakar Albadri was interviewed by the BBC World Service.

Occupied Somalia: Two Years after the Invasion


Medeshi
Occupied Somalia: Two Years after the Invasion
Dec 28, 2008
Two years ago this week in December 2006, the TPLF regime, an agent for foreign powers in the Horn of Africa backed by the US Administration, invaded and occupied the sovereign nation of Somalia in blatant violation of all international laws and principles.
It is to be recalled that in delivering a speech to parliament the Premier of the mercenary regime termed the invasion of a defenseless country using excessive military hardware both on land and air as a ‘war’ and that his troops achieved 100% success. He further stated that his troops managed to establish a never before seen peace in Somalia and declared that they would withdraw within a few weeks having restored ‘comprehensive peace and stability.’
Threatened by the six months of peace which the Somali people were able to achieve through their own initiative, certain members of the international community not only voiced their support for the illegal invasion but even fell short of words in their praise for the TPLF regime’s lawless actions. Some even ventured to say that Western nations could learn a valuable lesson from the TPLF’s military expertise in their war on terrorism, while others made claims about the development of a new stage for national reconciliation in Somalia.
While the TPLF regime and its masters were busy basking in the glory of their bogus victory, others who had taken a practical stock of the developments maintained that just because the TPLF troops managed to easily occupy defenseless Somali towns could not be considered as a military victory, and predicted that Ethiopian troops were being plunged into a quagmire of prolonged war and that external interference in Somalia could only lead to further chaos. In an interview he conducted just before the invasion, President Isaias Afwerki said: “The invasion on the Somali people that is being contemplated is only a march in to a quagmire.”
Today, two years later, the consequences of the invasion are clear for everyone to see. It has become more than evident that the US strategy in this case has been completely erroneous. And the ineffective so-called transitional government installed in Mogadishu by the TPLF troops could gain neither control nor acceptance among the Somali people. Furthermore, the initial euphoria of the TPLF troops soon came to an embarrassing conclusion as the dead bodies of their comrades lined the streets of Mogadishu. The fierce opposition of the Somali people spiraled out of the control and soon spread to the Somali seacoast and the Indian Ocean, morphing into a global threat. Bewildered by the Somali people’s fierce and unremitting resistance, the TPLF regime has been forced to look for another military force to replace its troops and make a humiliating exit.
As a result of the invasion, the Somali people had in the past two years endured extent of massacre, destruction, and displacement unprecedented even under the rule of the warlords. No other crimes on humanity committed in the 21st century could compare to the atrocities committed against the Somali people. The fact that the modern world that prides itself on its civilized laws and principles could not put an end to the crimes on humanity in Somalia will mark a very dark chapter in its history.


Shabait

HRW Says US Intervention Worsening Somalia Crisis


Medeshi Dec 28, 2008

HRW Says US Intervention Worsening Somalia Crisis

Report:
This past year, Somalis have experienced the worst violence in a decade. In a new report, Human Rights Watch says the United States is only making the crisis worse. The report states, “The United States, treating Somalia primarily as a battlefield in the global war on terror, has pursued a policy of uncritical support for transitional government and Ethiopian actions, and the resulting lack of accountability has fueled the worst abuses.” We speak to HRW’s Leslie Lefkow.
Guest:
Leslie Lefkow, Leads Human Rights Watch’s Horn of Africa research team and contributed to the latest Human Rights Watch report on Somalia, “So Much to Fear: War Crimes and the Devastation of Somalia.”
AMY GOODMAN: Two years after US-backed Ethiopian troops invaded Somalia, they are set to withdraw from the war-ravaged country by the end of this year. The African Union, meanwhile, has announced it will extend the mandate of its 3,400-member force in the capital city of Mogadishu by another two months.
The US-backed transitional government is facing new setbacks after an official appointed to be prime minister last week just resigned, following opposition from the Somali parliament and threats of sanctions from East African leaders.
This past year, Somalis have experienced the worst violence in a decade, according to the group Doctors without Borders, that lists Somalia among the worst humanitarian crises of the year. A new report by Human Rights Watch states, “The last two years are not just another typical chapter in Somalia’s troubled history. The human rights and humanitarian catastrophe facing Somalia today threatens the lives and livelihoods of millions of Somalis on a scale not witnessed since the early 1990s.”
Over a million Somalis have been displaced from their homes, and thousands have been killed. Two-thirds of the population in Mogadishu, the capital, have fled. The Human Rights Watch report is called “So Much to Fear.” It says the United States is only making the crisis worse. The report states, “The United States, treating Somalia primarily as a battlefield in the global war on terror, has pursued a policy of uncritical support for transitional government and Ethiopian actions, and the resulting lack of accountability has fueled the worst abuses.”
I’m joined on the phone right now from Amsterdam by one of the authors of the report. Leslie Lefkow leads Human Rights Watch’s Horn of Africa research team.
Welcome to Democracy Now!, Leslie. Your major findings?
LESLIE LEFKOW: Thanks for having me on the program. Yeah, this report that we’ve just released is the second major investigation that we’ve done into what’s been happening in Somalia over the last two years, and we find that all of the warring parties, so the Ethiopians, the forces of the Somali transitional government and the insurgents, have all been responsible for massive and heinous abuses: indiscriminate bombardment of civilians, looting, rape, arbitrary detentions on a tremendous scale. And it’s really the effect of these crimes, these very serious international crimes, that have forced two-thirds of the population of Mogadishu to flee the city in a way that we really haven’t seen anywhere else in the world perhaps since the war in Chechnya some years ago.
AMY GOODMAN: And what about the role of, well, for example, out country, the United States? What role has it played in Somalia?
LESLIE LEFKOW: Well, the US policy in Somalia has been problematic on two levels. It’s been problematic because the most visible face of US policy has been twofold. It’s been a series of air strikes in different parts of Somalia, targeting suspected terrorists, individuals. There have been a handful of individuals who were suspected of having links to al-Qaeda who have been sheltering in Somalia for some years. And the US has launched at least four air strikes at different times over the last couple of years, most of which have failed to hit the target and have hit civilians, injured civilians and killed civilians instead. So that’s been problematic, because, you know, the fact that civilians have been the main casualties of these attacks has been a source of real grievance to Somalis.
The second layer of the problem is the fact that the US is perceived as backing the Ethiopian intervention unconditionally. The US and Ethiopia are very close partners in the war on terror in the region in the Horn of Africa, and the fact that Ethiopian forces have also been committing serious abuses and that these abuses have been met with utter silence in Washington by the US makes—it creates the perception among many Somalis that the US doesn’t care what the cost of this war is on civilians and really has no concern for the welfare of ordinary Somalis.
AMY GOODMAN: What do you think needs to happen right now, Leslie Lefkow?
LESLIE LEFKOW: Well, you know, Somalia is a very complex problem. There are many layers to it. There’s regional layers. There’s an internal political crisis. But I think, you know, there are a number of steps that Human Rights Watch sees where we think we could—you know, that could lead to some progress. And number one among those is the need for accountability. One of the problems is Somalia has been considered to be a kind of free-fire zone by all of the parties, by the Ethiopians, by the US, you know, where anything goes. And we need to see a new awareness and recognition of the crimes that have happened, so, you know, statements condemning these crimes, statements that we would see coming out of Washington if it were probably any other country. So that kind of recognition of the crimes and real support for accountability, an end to this impunity that has governed—you know, that has reigned in Somalia for years now. So, for example, we would like to see the US support a commission of inquiry to investigate the crimes by all parties and to look at different kinds of mechanisms to bring the perpetrators of crimes to justice.
But there are other—you know, there are other political steps that also need to be taken. There needs to be real support for an inclusive political process that will include all the actors. One of the main problems with the peace process over the last eight months has been that the main group with the guns, the more radical Islamic groups that control much of southern Somalia, are actually not involved in the peace process.
AMY GOODMAN: Well, I want to talk more about the peace process with a Somali activist who I just met in Stockholm. I want to thank you, Leslie Lefkow, for joining us, of Human Rights Watch. And we will link to your report on our website, democracynow.org.

US Senator Russ Feingold's call for a new strategy in the Horn of Africa


Posted by Medeshi on Dec 28, 2008

US Senator Russ Feingold's call for a new strategy in the Horn of Africa

(Djibouti Dec 22– )Today, U.S. Senator Russ Feingold (D-WI) called for a new strategy to address instability, terrorism and the humanitarian crisis in Somalia and the Horn of Africa while visiting Djibouti, which is hosting the Somalia peace process. Feingold, Chairman of the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Subcommittee on African Affairs, met with the President and Foreign Minister of Djibouti, the Prime Minister of the Somali Transitional Federal Government (TFG), the leadership of the opposition Alliance for the Re-Liberation of Somalia, the United Nations Special Representative for Somalia, the President of Somaliland, and members of Somalia's civil society. He also visited the U.S. base in Djibouti, home to the military's Combined Joint Task Force - Horn of Africa.
"There is both an urgent need and an opportunity for a new U.S. policy for Somalia and the Horn of Africa," Feingold said. "With the security and humanitarian crisis deepening, the expansion of the Shebab terrorist group, the announced withdrawal of Ethiopian troops from Somalia, and a fragile peace process, it is critical that the incoming Obama Administration take immediate steps to develop a new, comprehensive strategy for Somalia and the region. Disjointed policies in Somalia have often undermined one another, ultimately proving counterproductive. Moving forward, we must address direct threats at the same time that we confront the ongoing humanitarian and human rights crisis, supporting legitimate governance institutions, promote accountability and rule of law and work to undercut the appeal of violent extremism. The current situation is not just a disaster for the people of Somalia and the region. It is a direct threat to America's national security."
Feingold has led efforts in the Senate to focus on this critical region of the world. He authorized legislation, passed by Congress, requiring the administration to develop a comprehensive stabilization and reconstruction strategy for Somalia and has consistently called on the international community to commit the necessary resources and attention to stabilize Somalia and rebuild its institutions. Recently, insurgent militias in Somalia have overtaken several strategic towns as they march toward the capital city of Mogadishu. They now control territory throughout southern and central Somalia. Ethiopian troops supporting the TFG have announced plans to withdraw at the end of the year, which could lead to a power vacuum. Feingold has stated that instability in the country has enabled the recent rise in pirate attacks off the Somali coast.
On March 11, 2008, Feingold chaired a full Foreign Relations Committee hearing on U.S. policy options for the Horn of Africa. The New York Times has labeled Feingold "the Senate's leading expert on Somalia." This is his ninth official visit to Africa. He last visited the continent in August 2007 when he traveled to the Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda. He is on a three-country tour that includes Germany, the headquarters of the Department of Defense's Africa Command, and Tanzania.

Listening to Occupied Somalia

Medeshi
Listening to Occupied Somalia
December 28, 2008:

On Christmas day, a UAV crashed outside the Somali town of Baidoa. Ethiopian occupiers in the area rushed to the scene, and kept people away. The UAV was believed to be an American Predator. Local civilians reported that a small aircraft had been circling the Baidoa area for at least a day. Earlier this year, another Predator came down near the town of Marka, further south.
The U.S. and France have a counter-terror task force in Djibouti, Somalias neighbor in the north. Manned and unmanned recon aircraft operate out of Djibouti, as do American and French special operations troops. Predators have fired Hellfire missiles at Islamic radical leaders over the last year, killing several of them.
(Photo: Evil-eyes A Marine CH-46E helicopter )
Baidoa is the headquarters of the Transitional National Government, a coalition of clans and warlords, that is fighting several groups of Islamic radicals. Ethiopia has a army force of about 15,000 in Somalia, but is in the process of withdrawing them. There are also nearly 2,000 African Union peacekeepers in Mogadishu, southeast of Baidoa, and these troops are likely to withdraw in the next six months as well. All that's keeping an eye on Somalia are U.S. UAVs, taps in local electronic communication, and a network of informants on the ground, maintained by U.S. Army Special Forces and the CIA.
Strategy Page

Losing Somalia, US Eyes Somaliland


Medeshi Dec 26, 2008
Losing Somalia, US Eyes Somaliland
American officials are now examining whether the US should give support to the region's independence.CAIRO — With its allies failing to destabilize war-racked Somalia, the US is turning its attention to the breakaway Somaliland as the new card to play in the strategic Horn of Africa region.
"Somaliland should be independent," one defense official told the Washington Post on Tuesday, December 4.
Somaliland is an autonomous region in the north-western portion of Somalia that advocates independence from Mogadishu.
The breakaway territory of some 3.5 million people declared independence in 1991, but is not internationally recognized.
American officials are now examining whether the US should give support to the region's independence.
They argue that Somaliland could offer greater potential for US military assistance inside Somalia.
"We should build up the parts that are functional and box in" unstable regions, particularly around Mogadishu, said the defense official.
Somaliland's leaders have long distanced themselves from Somalia's central transitional government.
The region has escaped much of the chaos and violence that plagued Somalia since neighboring Ethiopia sent in troops to oust the Islamic Courts in favor of the interim government.
Since then, Somalia has plunged into abyss with daily shooting and fighting.
Difficult Option
The Pentagon's plan is facing opposition from the State Department, which believes Washington should not recognize Somaliland until the African Union does.
"We do not want to get ahead of the continental organization on an issue of such importance," Assistant Secretary of State Jendayi E. Frazer told the Post.
The issue is diplomatically sensitive because recognizing Somaliland could set a precedent for other secession movements seeking to change colonial-era borders, opening a Pandora's box in the region.
"We're caught between a rock and a hard place because they're not a recognized state," recognizes a senior official in the US Department of Defense.
Other Pentagon officials fault the State's view altogether.
"The State Department wants to fix the broken part first," said the defense official. "That's been a failed policy."
In Djibouti, US military officials are eager to engage Somaliland.
"We'd love to, we're just waiting for State to give us the okay," said Navy Capt. Bob Wright, head of strategic communication for the Combined Joint Task Force Horn of Africa.
The force is composed of about 1,800 US troops who conduct military training and reconstruction projects in the region.
Washington says Somalia as the greatest source of instability in the Horn of Africa.
Pro-Ethiopia
But as US officials mull their options, they stand stubborn in supporting their Ethiopian ally in the war-torn nation.
"Any government that provides Somalis with assistance we support, including Ethiopia," a senior defense official affirmed.
In recent months, several human rights groups have spoken out against Ethiopian violations in Somalia.
They accuse Ethiopian forces of abuses such as raping, indiscriminate killing of civilians and bombing and burning of entire villages.
"I am unaware of specific allegations regarding the conduct of the Ethiopian troops," said the Pentagon official.
Ethiopia has long been a strong ally of Washington in the strategic Horn of Africa.
For years the US has been pouring weapons, military advisers and millions of dollars in military aid into Ethiopia, and the American military has trained Ethiopian troops at bases in the eastern region.

From Bristol to Mogadishu, with love


Medeshi Dec 26, 2008
From Bristol to Mogadishu, with love
The BBC's Mohamed Olad Hassan meets a Mogadishu family that depends for money on a relative living and working in the UK. The relative works in a warehouse in Bristol, and supports eight families back in Somalia with the money he makes.
Living in Mogadishu, the capital of a lawless country, is far from easy.
Thousands of its residents have already fled Somalia as a result of violence between Islamist insurgents and Ethiopian troops, which back the weak but UN-recognised government of Somalia.
The country's official unemployment rate is close to 100%.
Many people have little choice but to live in camps for internally displaced people. Some in Mogadishu depend solely on remittances from their relatives abroad. Others run small businesses.
Abdulahi Husein Aboti is a 33-year-old father of four - two sons and two daughters. The family lives together in a troubled zone in the south of the capital. Most of his neighbours and his relatives have already fled.
Because the Ethiopians have bases nearby, the area is always a prime target for the insurgents.
Staying in the city
But, unlike many others, he has decided to remain in his own home, with his wife, 24-year-old Anisa, and their children. He says he doesn't have enough money to enable the family to seek shelter in a safer part of the city.
"I know everything is from God," he says.
"We remain here because living in IDP camps is not healthy and I can't afford to pay for medicine for my kids if they fall ill.
(Photo: Aboti and Anisa live in southern Mogadishu with their four children)
"We live here and every time fighting goes on around us, we duck while it is going on and then come out once it subsides."
Despite such risks surrounding his family, Aboti is more worried about what would happen to his children and wife if his brother - who lives and works in the UK city of Bristol - were to lose his job.
He says that because of the global financial crisis the money sent back by his brother has already decreased by a quarter.
"My family depends completely on my brother in Britain, who sends us $150 every month.
"I have no job here and nowhere else to turn. I'm waiting for my destiny. He has dropped the amount he was sending us from $200 to $150," he said.
Balancing the budget
"Now we live a simple life, but it's not a real one. You can imagine, $150 is just not enough for a family like ours. The kids need milk and food - which are expensive. You even need money for water here.
"But I am really worried that this false life might turn into nothing if my brother Abdi Husein, in Bristol, loses his current job or if the financial crisis gets any worse," Aboti said.
His wife Amisa too senses that times could get even tougher for her family. But she points out that it will be her, not Aboti, who will feel the pain of feeding a family with a very restricted income. She is the one who manages the family budget.
"If you are short of money in Mogadishu, planning family meals is very difficult, because the prices of essential food stuffs fluctuate so much," Anisa explains.
"For example, one day you go to market and buy something. The next morning the prices have already changed but your income always remains the same, so how do you manage? It's like living just for the sake of living."
"But my worst fear would be if my children's paternal uncle in Britain - our only tower of our strength and the sole bread-winner for my family - were to lose his job as a result of the current financial crisis," she said.

Story from BBC NEWS:

Chinese navy to patrol Somali Coast

Medeshi Dec 26, 2008
Chinese navy to patrol Somali coast
Three Chinese naval vessels are to leave for the waters off Somalia to start anti-piracy operations.The two destroyers and a supply ship will have about 70 special operations troops aboard, the state-run Xinhau news agency reported.
The destroyers, Haikou and Wuhan, are said to be two of China's most sophisticated warships and will set sail on Friday.Rear Admiral Du Jingcheng, the mission commander, told Xinhau: "We have made special preparations to deal with pirates, even though these waters are not familiar to us."
"Our primary target is not striking them but dispelling them.
"If the pirates make direct threats against the warships or the vessels we escort, the fleet will take counter measures."
A surge in attacks this year in the Gulf of Aden and Indian Ocean has pushed up insurance costs, brought the pirates tens of millions of dollars in ransom payments and prompted foreign warships to patrol the area.
While China's growing wealth and influence have seen it involved in peacekeeping operations around the world, it has traditionally kept troops close to home, reflecting a doctrine of non-interference in other nations' affairs.Possible Japanese deploymentThe Chinese deployment comes as Japan also considers sending ships to the area.Taro Aso, the Japanese prime minister, ordered Yasukazu Hamada, the defence minister, to move ahead with deliberations on how the armed forces could act, the government's senior spokesman told the Reuters news agency."He ordered the defence minister to speed up considerations," Takeo Kawamura, the chief cabinet secretary, said.The dispatch could prove a legal and diplomatic hurdle for Japan, whose military activities overseas are restricted by its pacifist constitution.
Japan's forces have not engaged in combat since the second world war though Japanese forces have been in Iraq to help in reconstruction.
Source:Agencies

Qatar, Malawi, Angola and Ethiopia on top of GDP growth forecasts, 2009


Medeshi Dec 26, 2008
Ethiopia 4th Fastest Growing Economy in the World in 09 - Economist
(nazret) - The Economist magazine predicts Ethiopia's economy to grow by more than 7% in 2009 and predicts the country to be the 4th fastest growing economy for 2009. According to the Economist Intelligence Unit, GDP growth forecasts for 2009, Qatar will be the fastest economy with a GDP growth of close to 14% followed by Malawi, Angola and Ethiopia. Ethiopia's economy is expected to grow faster than red-hot Chinese economy in 2009. The latest GDP growth forecast was published on page 169 of the US edition of The Economist magazine (The Economist December 20th-January 2 2009)
Ethiopia has been described as the fastest non-oil economy in Africa by IMF. CIA World Factbook puts Ethiopia's GDP at $56.05 billion (2007 est. PPP) / $19.43 billion (2007 est. official exchange rate). The Economist's, The World in 2009 magazine, predicts Ethiopia's GDP to reach $31 Billion (PPP $71 Billion) in 2009. If Ethiopia can sustain the economic growth of the last few years, Ethiopia could become the biggest economy in East Africa in few years time.

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Somaliland records drop in landmine accidents


Medeshi
Somaliland records drop in landmine accidents
HARGEISA, 26 December 2008 (IRIN) - The Republic of Somaliland recorded a sharp drop in landmine-related accidents in 2008 compared with 2007, a mine clearance organisation official has said.
Hassan Ahmed Kosar, operations officer for the Halo Trust, the only international mine clearance organisation currently operating in Somaliland, said 15 accidents - down from 45 in 2007 - were recorded in Somaliland in 2008.
(Photo : A de-mining official uses a metal detector to check for landmines in Somaliland)
"Most of the accidents were caused by unexploded ordnance [UXO] and anti-tank mines planted in roads during the confrontation between the SNM [Somali National Movement - the liberation organisation in Somaliland between 1981 and 1991] and [former Somali President] Siyad Barre's regime in the late 1980s, as well as during the Ogaden war between Somalia and Ethiopia in the late 1970s," Kosar told IRIN on 22 December in Somaliland's capital, Hargeisa.
(Photo : The wreckage of a truck that hit a landmine in Somaliland)
Kosar said Somaliland was one of five unrecognised nations to have signed the international landmine ban treaty, adding that the government had destroyed 3,014 anti-personnel mines in its stores in 2003.
He said the Halo Trust had destroyed more than 3,614 landmines or UXO, 90,694 small arms, and 37,760 anti-tank mines since 1999.
According to the Somaliland Mine Action Centre (SMAC), a government body, over two million mines were planted in Somaliland between 1964 and 1990.
Abdirahman Yusuf, a SMAC operations officer, said: "According to the last survey - conducted in collaboration with international mine clearance organisations, particularly the Halo Trust - over 600 roads were mined during the war; there are also 300 minefields scattered throughout the country."
International demining efforts
Demining operations have been going on in Somaliland since 1991.
Rimfire, a UK-based mine clearance organisation, began its first demining project in Somaliland in 1992-1993, clearing over 64,000 landmines and UXO.
“We are much bigger than Rimfire in terms of manpower and we also use modern demining equipment," the Halo Trust’s Kosar said.
In 2003 the Danish Demining Group (DDG) cleared landmines from 300 roads. Santa Barbara, an international mine clearance organisation, was also active in Somaliland 2000-2002.
The Halo Trust is carrying out a new landmine survey due for completion in late 2009. Kosar made a plea for more international funding to speed up mine clearance operations.

Mark Bowden: In Somalia, guns of anarchy still reign


Medeshi
Mark Bowden: In Somalia, guns of anarchy still reign
Wednesday, Dec. 24, 2008

In 1999, when I was touring the United States to promote my book "Black Hawk Down," the story of an ill-fated U.S. raid against a rebel warlord in the Somali capital of Mogadishu, I was often invited to college campuses, where I was fond of asking audiences whether there were any anarchists among them. Occasionally a scruffy student or two would raise a hand.
"Good news," I'd tell them. "You don't have to wait. Go to Somalia. Check it out."

When I was last there in 1997, Somalia had already been rudderless for six years. Mogadishu lay in rubble, like a city hit by a natural disaster. Every wall was pockmarked with holes from bullets and cannon blasts. Gunmen in pickup trucks terrorized the streets. Unbelievably, in the decade since then, it has only gotten worse.
While the world has largely stood by, the Horn of Africa has served as a laboratory for anarchy -- and the results aren't pretty. Somalia today is teetering on the edge of becoming an Islamist state while harboring terrorists who export its chaos to its neighbors.
"Here we have a country that has been in crisis for nearly 20 years," Ahmedou Ould-Abdallah, the U.N. special representative for Somalia, said to me by phone from Nairobi. "And we say, 'Well OK, we'll chase down some pirates and send some bags of rice.' It is not enough."
Today 3 million Somalis, half the country's population, rely on food handouts from the United States and Europe, delivered by increasingly harassed humanitarian organizations. Millions who could afford to have fled.
Meanwhile, Islamist terrorist groups train and hatch plots against targets in neighboring countries: The al-Qaida cell that bombed the U.S. embassies in Nairobi and Dar es Salaam in 1998 was and still is based in Somalia. Since then, the same group and another have successfully bombed a Mumbai resort, attempted to shoot down an Israeli passenger jet and carried out a number of assassinations and other killings, including that of an Italian nun in the town of Elwak, near the border with Kenya. Local mullahs enforce horribly brutal penalties for acts that most of the world doesn't even consider criminal.
And now, pirates -- nothing more than the general criminal chaos spilled from land to sea -- ply the waters off Somalia's thousand-mile coastline.
A flimsy "transitional" authority, a coalition of warlords supported by the United Nations, ostensibly governs the country, but it spends most of its time arguing from the safety of neighboring capitals over power it doesn't have.
Back in 1997, few Somalis believed that the world's cold shoulder would endure. People would line up in the street outside the gates of the compound where I stayed while researching my book to see me. Sightings of Americans were then so rare that most people refused to believe that I was just a writer. Many preferred to believe that I was on a secret mission for the United Nations or the United States, that I was laying the groundwork for the return of nation-building, for the restoration of law and order, basic services and sanity.
They are still waiting for that. Meanwhile, because there is no government, there are no public schools, no universities, no courts, no trash collection, no electrical grid (Mogadishu nights are filled with the steady hammering of generators) -- none of the basic services of a civil society.
Owning anything of value in Somalia means having to arm yourself, because someone more powerful will eventually try to take it away. You can tell a person's relative importance by the length of his armed entourage as he moves through the streets. Young men with nothing else to do are lured into these private armies by promises of food, money, shelter and a steady supply of narcotic khat.
When President-elect Barack Obama takes office, he can help greatly simply by putting a stop to U.S. missile attacks on suspected Islamist terrorists. Whatever is gained by eliminating one murderous zealot is lost by turning entire Somali communities against Western aid efforts.
Somalia has a lesson for the rest of the world. It's an old lesson, but one that we have yet to learn: Ignoring a problem does not kill it or contain it. A lawless zone soon enough becomes a danger to more than those trapped in its borders. We will have to engage with whoever comes to power in Somalia next, both for humanitarian reasons and in the best interests of the region and the world.
Mark Bowden is an author and national correspondent for the Atlantic.

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