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INTERVIEW-Somalia
says Eritrea deserves punishment for chaos
NAIROBI, Oct 18 Shaaficiyah Media
Eritrea should be punished for
threatening the Horn of Africa region by supporting Somali
rebels, Somalia's foreign affairs minister said on Sunday.
The United States, Britain, United
Nations and the African Union (AU) accuse Eritrea of fanning
the chaos in Somalia, through provision of arms and logistical
support to the radical al Shabaab rebels, seen by Washington
as al Qaeda's proxy.
"Enough is enough. Eritrea
has defied calls from the international community and individual
countries to play a positive role," Ali Jama Ahmed told
Reuters.
Early this month, Britain told
the U.N. Security council it was ready to punish Eritrea for
its role in Somalia.
The government in the Eritrean
capital Asmara rejects accusations that it arms the al Shabaab
insurgents. [ID:nLE229162]
Ahmed said that while the region
had been trying to engage Eritrea constructively, its leadership
had chosen to continue to be part of the Somalia problem.
He said Asmara had to re-engage
with the region in its search for an end to the fighting and
human suffering in his country.
"Eritrea has to take the
right trail or face sanction which we hope the Security Council
will impose soon," he said in the Kenyan capital on his
way to Kampala for a meeting on Africa's 17 million refugees.
Somalis displaced from their
homeland by the fighting account for a substantial proportion
of those refugees.
MORE PEACEKEEPERS NEEDED
The minister said al Qaeda's
presence in Somalia was not a secret and called for the AU
to send additional troops.
"It is no longer in dispute
that al Qaeda is active in Somalia and al Shabaab is promoting
global jihad centres which is worrying Somali leadership and
the region," he said.
"We need to focus on strengthening
Somali security forces ... we hope AMISOM (AU peacekeepers)
will be strengthened and the deployment of the original 8,000
troops will be completed soon."
Only 5,000 Ugandan and Burundian
peacekeepers have been deployed of the 8,000 promised by the
AU.
Somalia's 18-years conflict has
killed nearly 19,000 civilians since the start of 2007 and
driven another 1.5 million from their homes.
Pledges by the international
community to help the Transitional Federal Government, in
its war against al Shabaab and Hizbul Islam rebels need to
be fulfilled on time, he added.
"We have to do everything
in a concerted and comprehensive manner. The world has to
come forward and play a more active role," Ahmed said.
(Editing by Jon Hemming)
Shaaficiyah Media
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