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Britain calls for sanctions
against Eritrea
Mogadishu Friday 9 October 2009 Shaaficiyah
Britain called Thursday for U.N. sanctions
against the tiny Red Sea nation of Eritrea for supplying weapons
to opponents of the transitional government in nearby Somalia
in violation of a U.N. arms embargo.
The United States, which warned in July that
Eritrea could soon face sanctions unless it stops support
for Somali extremists, said it was time for the international
community to address the country's destabilizing impact on
Somalia and the region.
And Russia called on countries in the region
not to allow mercenaries and arms into Somalia in violation
of sanctions.
The comments at an open meeting of the U.N.
Security Council indicated growing interest in punishing Eritrea,
which has rejected accusations including by the Security
Council that it supplied weapons to Islamist opponents
of Somalia's Western-backed transitional government.
Britain's U.N. Ambassador John Sawers said
his government is concerned that the latest report by U.N.
experts monitoring the arms embargo included evidence that
Eritrea provided support to opponents of the Somali government.
"Leaders of the African Union have requested
the Security Council to impose sanctions against Eritrea in
response," he said.
"The council will need to give serious
consideration to the African Union's requests over the coming
weeks," Sawers said, adding that Britain "stands
ready to support such action."
In July, U.S. Ambassador Susan Rice renewed
U.S. allegations that Eritrea is "arming, supporting
and funding" extremists including al-Shabab, and could
soon face sanctions unless it stops. The Islamist militia
group was designated a terrorist group by Washington in 2008
and has been trying to topple the transitional government.
U.S. deputy ambassador Rosemary DiCarlo told
the council Thursday that "al-Shabab and other extremist
groups, fueled by outside actors, have caused numerous deaths
and violated the rights of Somali citizens with impunity
including by assaulting, detaining, and illegally arresting
civilians."
"It is time for the international community
to consider ways to address Eritrea's destabilizing impact
on Somalia and the region," DiCarlo said.
Russia's deputy U.N. ambassador Konstantin
Dolgov said the Somali government needs support from the leaders
of neighboring countries.
"We call upon the states of the region
not to allow the flow of foreign mercenaries and arms into
Somalia in violation of the relevant sanctions regime introduced
by the Security Council," he said. "We believe that
there is a need to take additional steps to strengthen this
regime."
The council was meeting to discuss a report
by Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon which said the government
has successfully rebuffed threats from extremist forces to
overthrow it. But he said the government still faces many
challenges, first and foremost dealing with widespread insecurity
and a recent upsurge in attacks, assassinations and abductions.
Somalia has not had an effective government
since 1991 when warlords overthrew longtime dictator Mohamed
Siad Barre and then turned on each other, plunging the country
into chaos and anarchy.
The fragile U.N.-backed government and an
undermanned, poorly resourced African Union peacekeeping force
have struggled to defend government buildings, the port and
airport in the capital, Mogadishu most recently rebuffing
an offensive by Al-Shabab and the allied Islamic Party.
U.N. political chief B. Lynn Pascoe reported
"slow but notable progress towards stability."
But he said the humanitarian situation has
"worsened dramatically" due to intensified fighting
in Mogadishu, growing insecurity in much of central and southern
Somalia, and deepening drought.
The result is that some 3.7 million people
50 percent of Somalia's population need humanitarian
aid, he said.
Pascoe cautioned peace and stability will
take time and "national and external spoilers must be
neutralized."
"Targeted sanctions can be one effective
way to deal with the spoilers," he said.
Speaking last, Somalia's U.N. Ambassador Elmi
Ahmed Duale said: "We also wish ... that the Security
Council would apply and enforce sanctions against all spoilers,
whether individuals, entities, or country, or countries."
Source: AP
Shaaficiyah Media
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