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Abdillahi Yusuf Urges Lifting Of Arms Embargo
ISSUE 192
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Elusive Terrorist Abdirahman Indho-Ade Finally In Police Custody

Will the UN take Professor Herbst’s advice?

'Jihadi Warrior' Given 15 Years For Terror Offences

'It's Just Not Fair,' I Feel Like Saying

Somaliland Intensifies War On Deadly AIDS Virus

EU Programme Repairing Somaliland Roads And Bridges

Regional Affairs

Somali 'Al-Qaeda Leader' Arrested

Horn of Africa Force Seeks to Win Friends, Prevent Terrorism

Editorial

International News

Pentagon Warns of Rising Terror Threat in Horn of Africa Region

Failed Bomb Suspect Due In Court

AG Probing Race Role In Attacks Vs. Somalis

26 Somalis Surrender To Police, Seek Asylum

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

GUIDED BY GOD

Political Crisis Pushes Somalia Closer To War

African Delegates Gather For Cities Without Slums Programme

Yemen Says Seized 10,000 African Immigrants In 2005

Opinions

A Little Message Of Appreciation

Somali Graduates Are Working In Non-Graduate Jobs

Somaliland Is Always Held To A Higher Standard Than Somalia

Somaliland Parliamentary Elections: Completing The Circle

Somaliland’s Economic And Political Approach Revisited

Eye Witness Report From Lascanood: Dead End Road For Pro Majertenia Lascanooders


NAIROBI, 19 Sep 2005 (IRIN) - The President of Somalia's Transitional Federal Government, Abdillahi Yusuf Ahmed, has appealed for the lifting of the UN arms embargo against Somalia on the grounds that it is hampering his government's efforts to maintain law and order in the war-ravaged Horn of Africa state.

"The embargo directly undermines the government's inherent right and genuine effort of forming its national security force that would protect the public and keep the peace by enforcing the law and order throughout Somalia," Yusuf said on Saturday as he addressed the UN General Assembly in New York.

The president suggested that sanctions targeted at individuals would do more to foster peace and stability in Somalia, the UN News Service reported on Saturday. He called on the UN to establish "punitive and targeted sanctions" against those attempting to sabotage the country's chances of lasting peace.

"It does not make any sense to the rational mind to help Somalis reach a comprehensive political settlement for their long conflict, while at the same time denying them the ability to build the institutions through which they would overcome the lawlessness in their country," he said.

The interim president further urged the international community to provide the necessary financial and political support to the government. He noted that Somalia needed help to implement demobilisation, disarmament and reintegration programmes and to deal with other security concerns.

The UN imposed an arms embargo on Somalia in 1992, when civil war broke out following the collapse of the government of President Siyad Barre in 1991. After 14 years without a functional central authority, the current Transitional Federal Institutions were established in October 2004 in Nairobi, Kenya, with Yusuf as President.

 


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