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Gunmen Won't Let Salad Use Airport
ISSUE 90
Front Page
Index

Headlines

- Annalena’s Body To Be Buried In Wajeer In A Private Ceremony,

Public Places in Borama And Forli’ Named After Her
- Edna Takes Quest for Recognition To the Air waves In California

- Minister of Commerce and Industry Addresses African American Association

- Mohamed Hashi And Edna Aden Meet With Somalilanders In California

-International Crisis Group Report On Somaliland Democratization And Its Discontents, Part XI

- Somaliland Tries To Get Some Respect

Health

- Drug: The Double Edged Knife (Part 25)

- HIV/AIDS Becoming Young Person's Disease

International News

- Gunmen Won't Let Salad Use Airport
 
- US Town Blocks Resettlement Of Somali Refugees

- Thousands At Risk Of Malnutrition In Sool Area

- Iranian Lawyer Awarded Nobel Peace Prize

- Specter of Somalia Haunts U.N. Role in Iraq

- Campaign Launched to Regulate Arms Trade

-Top UN Official Condemns Aid Worker's Murder

-EU Parliament Chief Lauds Slain Aid Worker

- Bishop Recalls How Refugee Helper Died
- UNHCR Mourns Death of Dr. Annalena Tonelli

- TB Professionals Conference Pay Tribute To Annalena Tonelli

- Rookie School Leader Faces Hard Challenge

Peace Talks

- Bush Talks About Somalia And Terrorism

Arts & Entertainment


Editorial & Opinions

- The Devastating Loss Of Annalena

- A New Mother Teresa

- The Murder of Dr Annalena Tonelli: What Questions Should We Ask?

- Condolences

- Homage Ceremony For Annalena Held In Hargeisa


MOGADISHU, Somalia, October 9, 2003 (AP)- Gunmen refused to let the president of Somalia's transitional government depart for Libya on Thursday from an airfield they control, a witness said.

The gunmen demanded cash from President Abdiqasim Salad Hassan, who wields little power in the lawless country, if he wanted to fly out of the Ballidogleh airport.

The gunmen claimed they were former Abdiqasim bodyguards who hadn't received their salaries. Abdiqasim refused to pay, and returned to Mogadishu with his entourage after a tense standoff at the airfield, 62 miles northwest of Mogadishu, said the witness, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

The chartered plane Abdiqasim was supposed to take to Libya returned to its base in neighboring Djibouti.

Somalia descended into chaos after the faction leaders who ousted dictator Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991 turned on each other, transforming the country of 7 million people into a patchwork of fiefdoms. It now has no effective central government.

Officials from the transitional government refused to comment on the incident. They said Abdiqasim planned to depart Friday from a different airfield.

The transitional government, elected at a peace conference in Djibouti in Aug. 2000, has little influence because most of the country's major armed factions did not take part in the talks.

Fighting shut down Mogadishu's main air and sea ports long ago. But makeshift facilities have sprung up throughout the country.

 

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