Exiled Somali
Islamists defend their insurgency
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Published: Tuesday, 31 July,
2007, |
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ASMARA: Somalia’s exiled
opposition leaders yesterday lashed
out at the international community’s
support for the Ethiopian-backed
interim government and defended the
deadly insurgency against Mogadishu.
“The resistance of Somali people is
a legitimate response” to Ethiopian
occupation, former parliament
speaker Sharif Hassan Sheikh Aden
said in a statement issued in the
Eritrean capital Asmara.
Much of Somalia’s opposition
leadership has been in Asmara since
the Islamic Courts Union were ousted
by Ethiopian-backed government
troops earlier this year. They are
boycotting a reconciliation meeting
under way in Mogadishu.
Sheikh Aden blasted Western powers
for supporting the meeting, which he
described as “false peace talks” and
singled out France for criticism
following Foreign Minister Bernard
Kouchner’s visit to Ethiopia last
week.
The former speaker warned “Kouchner
and his Western allies” that “the
Somali regime has lost people’s
confidence.”
He also warned France to stop
backing the deployment of Burundian
peacekeepers in Mogadishu, “so as
not to appear hostile forces
enforcing occupation”.
In Addis Ababa Friday, Kouchner
called for urgent UN intervention in
the war-ravaged Horn of Africa
country.
Sheikh Aden and around 30 other
senior mainly Islamist Somali
leaders are preparing their own
conference in Asmara. It is due to
kick off on September 1.
Somalia has been without an
effective government since the 1991
ouster of dictator Mohamed Siad
Barre sparked a bloody power
struggle that has defied numerous
attempts to restore stability. – AFP |
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