Somalia reconciliation open to everyone,
even al-Shabaab.
March-1-2008 -Cowslafil
Mogadishu Somalia.
MOGADISHU, Somalia Feb 29 (Garowe Online)
- Somalia's interim Prime Minister, Nur "Adde" Hassan
Hussein, has said that his government is willing to meet with
all members of the opposition, including the al-Shabaab guerrillas
spearheading a bloody insurgency in the capital Mogadishu.
During a Voice of America Somali Service interview,
Prime Minister Nur Adde said that there is "no dispute"
brewing between him and President Abdullahi Yusuf when it comes
to the central issue of reconciliation.
"There is no dispute between me and the
President and I do not see any reason for it [dispute],"
the Prime Minister said on Friday, echoing similar words President
Yusuf said while addressing Parliament earlier this week. [
Full story]
Somali Prime Minister Nur Adde
He stated that, in his opinion, there was "not even a difference
of opinion" between him and the Somali President.
"There is only a question of which road
to take…and this goes beyond me and him [President Yusuf]
because it relates to the entire Cabinet, Parliament, and even
the public when we meet with them," Prime Minister Nur
Adde said.
He maintained that reconciliation remained
the only viable option to bring about lasting peace to Somalia
after more than 17 years of armed conflict.
"We [the government] support an open reconciliation
process with no preconditions and no Somali will be excluded,
even al-Shabaab," Prime Minister Nur Adde said when asked
whether or not he would engage al-Shabaab in peace talks.
He described the al-Shabaab fighters as "young
Somalis" who have rights and responsibilities in the country,
along with other opposition groups.
The Prime Minister did not provide a timetable
for when peace talks with the opposition might begin, but he
indicated that there are ongoing "informal contacts"
between the government and its opponents.
On a question regarding a possible power-sharing
scenario that would include giving the Prime Minister's post
to the opposition, Premier Nur Adde stated matter-of-factly
that he would readily resign in the interest of peace.
"I am ready for anything that will bring
peace [to Somalia]. Peace for the people is more important than
this seat [Prime Minister] and I am willing to step down if
it will bring peace," he said.
President Yusuf has been quoted numerous times
distancing his government from any negotiation with "extremist
groups," namely the al-Shabaab guerrillas.
Observers suggested that Prime Minister Nur
Adde's reconciliation approach is in conflict with President
Yusuf's hardline stance, which marginalizes some groups while
welcoming "moderate" elements of the opposition.
Opposition leaders, including al-Shabaab spokesmen,
have repeatedly refused to recognize or negotiate with the interim
government until Ethiopian troops withdraw from the country.
The bloody insurgency in Mogadishu, aimed at
expelling Ethiopian troops from Somalia, has been raging since
January 2007 when Mogadishu's Islamic rulers were overthrown
and the country plunged deeper into chaos.
More than 6,500 people were killed last year
in Mogadishu alone, according to human rights groups. Upwards
of 600,000 civilians fled their homes, creating what some UN
officials consider to be Africa's most pressing humanitarian
crisis.
Source: Garowe Online
Oslo Norwey
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