Somali Leaders Locked In Internal Dispute
While Rebels Advance On Mogadishu The
feuding leaders of
Somali President Abdullahi Yusuf and Prime Minister Nur Hassan Hussein met Friday with Ethiopian Foreign Minister Seyoum Mesfin for what were
described as frank talks.
Sources close to the meeting said Ethiopian officials
urged the two Somali leaders to settle a political dispute over cabinet posts.
But at the end of the day, those sources said neither
President Yusuf or Prime Minister Hussein was
willing to yield. Both men left later in the day for
Amid the political wrangling in the Ethiopian and Kenyan
capitals, reports from inside
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Al-Shabab gunmen during
exercises at their military training camp outside Mogadishu, |
Ethiopian and Somali officials in
"Of course we can say they are advancing toward
Mogadishu, its quite true, but the areas they are capturing now is not under
the TFG, only Marka, where the capital city of lower Shabelle, at one point the TFG appointed administration,
but that administration dissolved by itself and the people four months
ago," he said.
Farah admits the feuding leaders are in his words "stuck"
in their efforts to settle their political dispute, as they had agreed to do in
a deal struck through the east African regional grouping IGAD. He said it may
be necessary to put aside the disagreement about cabinet posts and proceed
directly to the formation of a successor government of national unity, which
would include the opposition
Farah said this is an issue on which Prime Minister Hussein, better
known as Nur Adde, and President Yusuf agree.
"Nur Adde
is the one who started these negotiation. He is
serious about it and will continue to finish it. Abdullahi
Yusuf and parliament also welcome that. And that is
the Unity govt. maybe under Yusuf, or Nur Adde or maybe a complete new
leadership," said Farah.
Ethiopian foreign ministry spokesman Wahde
Belay expressed regret at the lack of progress in settling Somalia's political
dispute, and said it could have a bearing on Ethiopia's decision whether to
withdraw its troops from Somalia in line with last month's Djibouti accord. Wahde said
As he spoke, news agency reports said Somali government
troops were massing at a key checkpoint south of
Source:Voanews