TFG moves following Al-Shabaab’s withdrawal from Mogadishu
Following the removal of Al-Shabaab fighters from Mogadishu,
President Sheikh Sharif declared a state of emergency on Saturday
last week covering areas recently vacated by Al-Shabaab and the IDP
camps located within Mogadishu. This included the districts of Karan,
Yaqshid, Hamar-Jadid, Shibis, Abdi Aziz and Bakhara Market as well
Badbado camp (the largest IDP centre in Dharkenley district) and the
other IDP camps within the city. This means the TFG forces will take
over the security and control of the camps and the areas recently
deserted by Al-Shabaab. Under the order which lasts for
three months, these districts are placed under military law; it does
not cover any other areas of the city.
The order underlines the fact that recent successive victories by
the TFG and AMISOM against Al-Shabaab, and the latter’s surprise
withdrawal from the city, have given President Sheikh Sharif
considerable political and military leverage. He is using the
opportunity to give a clear warning to any clan elders or former
warlords who might be thinking of trying to take advantage of Al-Shabaab’s
retreat on their own account and recreate the former clan enclaves.
It is also intended to demonstrate to the international community
(and to Somalis) that the TFG is in control and is going to act to
consolidate recent military successes.
One of Al-Shabaab’s leaders, Colonel Hassan Dahir Aweys has now
admitted publically that internal disputes precipitated Al-Shabaab’s
retreat from Mogadishu, noting that he himself had had a dispute
with Abu-Zubeyr (“Godane”). He also said Al-Shabaab would now be
concentrating on increasing numbers of hit and run attacks “as our
brothers in Afghanistan”.
Other Al-Shabaab commanders have said fighters would remain in the
city. Sources inside Al-Shabaab say three
operational zones have been designated. One in north Mogadishu is
under Sheikh Fuad Shongole; a second covering the area from the
rapid Police HQ, or Saydka, to KM4 will be under Sheikh Mukhtar
Robow, and the third area from KM4 to KM13 under Sheikh Ali Dheere.
While Al-Shabaab claims to be reorganizing, and to be building up
its forces in the Gedo, Juba and Hiiraan regions to resist an
offensive by TFG and allied forces, the TFG is also extending its
control within Mogadishu. The police have been ordered to camp in
Bakhara Market and provide security there, and extensive searches
are going on in Abdi Aziz, Karan, Wardhigley and parts of Yaqshid
before deploying forces there. Last week, AMISOM troops found an
abandoned Al-Shabaab weapons cache in the Bakhara market containing
over one hundred and thirty 155 mm artillery shells intended for use
in bomb-making. On Monday a plant to produce
improvised detonators, suicide vests and explosives was discovered.
Over 400 items of munitions and bomb-making equipment were found,
and it appeared Al-Shabaab had also been manufacturing hand grenades
and hand weapons, giving credence to recent claims that it had been
having financial problems and finding difficulties in the supply of
ammunition and weapons.
On Thursday last week, the
Preparatory Committee for the Consultative Meeting on Ending the
Transition Period, a group which involves representatives from the
UN, the TF Parliament, the TFG, Puntland, Ahlu Sunna and Galmudug,
decided on a date for the planned UN sponsored Consultative meeting
on the Transition - September 4th to 6th. The
committee approved a draft road map, benchmarks and a concept note
for the Consultative meeting. Full agreement on this will underline
the claim that the main disagreements within the TFG have been
sorted out.
UNPOS, the UN Political Office for Somalia, has finally indicated
that it is prepared to increase the number of its staff in
Mogadishu, from four to twenty four by the end of the year. The
United Nations Special Representative for Somalia, Ambassador Mahiga,
told the Security Council that the UN would begin to relocate its
Somalia operations from Nairobi in the next few months. “We are now
actively planning for an expanded UN presence inside Somalia, rather
than the ‘light footprint’ we had envisaged,” Mahiga said. He said
it was “critical that we secure the logistical support, including a
fast-tracked construction of permanent facilities to pave the way
for the deployment of additional staff in Somalia, particularly in
Mogadishu.” A base is being built at Aden Ade international airport
to house most of the increased numbers. Ambassador Mahiga also noted
that the most pressing immediate need was to secure access for
international humanitarian agencies bringing food and supplies into
the capital.
On Monday this week
a Security Council presidential statement stressed its support for
the Consultative meeting next month. The statement came after a
briefing from
Ambassador Mahiga. It said the meeting would be expected
to come up with “clear timelines and benchmarks to be implemented by
the Transitional Federal Institutions.” The Statement urged all
participants ‘to engage constructively and responsibly in this
meeting”. It noted that future support for the TFIs “would be
contingent upon completion of the tasks in the roadmap”. It is
anticipated that the roadmap will cover details of what is expected
and the specific timetable for all the necessary elements. These
will include security developments, the constitutional review and
adoption of the draft constitution, outreach and reconciliation, the
roll-out out of basic social and administrative services, the reform
of Parliament and the civil service, accountability, and finally,
the Electoral Commission, political parties, the election of the
President, the Speaker and his deputies and the final preparation
for the Constitutional Referendum and the General Election.
The Security Council statement stressed the importance of
“predictable, reliable and timely resources” to allow AMISOM to
fulfil its mandate and called again on the international community
to make contributions urgently. It reiterated its concern at the
continued instability on Somalia and stressed the need for a
comprehensive strategy to encourage peace and stability. It also
reiterated its grave concern over the famine conditions in several
parts of Somalia, welcomed the mobilization of the international
community and urged all parties to ensure full, safe and unhindered
access for the delivery of humanitarian aid across the country.
Earlier, following the request of AMISOM commander, Major-General
Mugisha, for the African Union to deploy more troops, President
Yoweri Museveni responded with a pledge to send an additional 2,000
Ugandan troops. Lt. Colonel Ankunda, AMISOM spokesperson, said the
increase would be used to consolidate security in the capital and
plan for phase two of the advance against Al-Shabaab. Burundi’s
President Nkurunziza has said Burundi will also send more troops if
it was thought necessary.
The AU Peace and Security Council itself was briefed on the
situation in Somalia on Tuesday by the AU Commissioner for Peace and
Security and heard communications from the UN Secretary-General’s
Special Representative for Somalia, and the IGAD Facilitator for
Somalia Peace and Reconciliation. It welcomed recent developments
and called on AU members states to provide the requisite support to
enable AMISOM to reach its UN authorized level of 12,000. It agreed
to meet again on September 9th to hear a report from the
Chairperson of the Commission ahead of the Security Council meeting
on Somalia in the context of Resolution 1964, which authorizes the
deployment of AMISOM until September 30th 2011.
This week, the African Union also held a two day workshop in Addis
Ababa to identify concrete actions to take in support of AMISOM.
This followed the renewed call by Dr. Jean Ping, AU Commission
Chairperson, for the UN Security Council to authorize deployment of
20,000 peacekeepers to Somalia, in the wake of recent AMISOM and TFG
victories. The AU has also called on the UN to take further steps to
expand the support package given to AMISOM, in line with the
requests with the AU Peace and Security Council decisions of October
last year. The meeting brought together troop-contributing
countries, actual and potential, AMISOM officials, IGAD, EASFCOM,
UN, the EU and representatives of the permanent members of the UN
Security Council. It identified the concrete steps necessary to
provide AMISOM with support commensurate with the challenges,
bearing in mind the planned meetings of the AU Peace and Security
Council and the UN Security Council.
AMISOM indicated it would focus in the coming months on securing
Mogadishu and its environs to facilitate reconciliation efforts and
the relocation and movement of international civilian staff,
implement phase two of the Concept of Operations as adopted by the
Peace and Security Council in October last year, and facilitate
humanitarian activities as required. The meeting recommended
acceleration of the deployment of the additional troops pledged by
Burundi, Uganda, Djibouti and Sierra Leone to bring the force up to
the 12,000 strength covered by the UN support package. It called for
enhancement of the support to take into account shortcomings
previously identified, including provision of attack and utility
helicopters, a maritime capability and combat engineering equipment.
It recommended the insertion of Police Units into Mogadishu to
bolster law and order, and free up the military for other
operations. It suggested the additional establishment of a guard
force, over and above the authorized strength of AMISOM, to provide
protection for the AU, UN and TFIs. It called for the Concept of
Operations of October 2010 to be revised by AMISOM to take account
of other suggestions, and for a list of requirements and
recommendations for further support for AMISOM to be made to the
Security Council in early September.
***************
top |
|
Promises of aid, visitors to Mogadishu and accusations of war crimes
This week, Andrew Mitchell, the UK’s Secretary of State for
International Development, became the first British minister to
visit Mogadishu for 18 years. In a press conference at the end of
his visit he said that if the international community did not
increase its response to “this dreadful famine” up to 400,000
children could starve to death. He pledged a further $41 million of
aid, to include food and medicine. There have been a number of
allegations of food aid being misappropriated and Mr. Mitchell said
it was imperative that the TFG controlled corruption. There were
claims earlier this week by journalists that up to half of the food
aid was being diverted. A TFG statement said there was no evidence
to support this allegation, and Prime Minister Abdiweli said the TFG
had zero tolerance for any kind of looting of food aid. The World
Food Program said it was investigating suspected thefts of
international aid, but it was “confident that the vast majority of
humanitarian food aid reached the starving people of Mogadishu and
saves lives every day.” It added that there were strict controls on
the ground despite the problems. The World Food Program is now
beginning to expand its activities into areas previously sealed off
by Al-Shabaab.
Another visitor to Mogadishu this week was President Ismail Omar
Guelleh of Djibouti, who held talks with President Sheikh Sharif and
visited Badbado camp where thousands of drought displaced people
have been settled, donating medical aid and food for malnourished
children. He also went to Benadir Hospital which looks after numbers
of malnourished children. He said the situation was far worse than
he had realized. Somali people, he said, needed help from the world,
and even more from Muslim countries. Djibouti itself is also
suffering from the drought, and around 1 in 5 of the population,
about 165,000 people need urgent humanitarian aid.
President Sheikh Sharif himself went to Turkey this week to attend a
ministerial meeting of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation
(previously the Organization of Islamic Conference) called to
discuss the situation in Somalia and the reasons for the famine. The
OIC has already developed a special program to assist Somalia,
providing $150 million to help in issues of food security, health,
drinking water and economic recovery. Countries that have been
coordinating aid through the OIC include Saudi Arabia, which has
allocated some $60 million of humanitarian aid, Iran ($25 million)
and Kuwait ($10 million). On Wednesday, OIC Secretary-General
Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu announced that members of the organization had
pledged another $350 million, and it hoped to raise this figure to
$500 million very shortly. The conference which heard from President
Sheikh Sharif, was told by Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan
that the Somali famine was a litmus test not only for Muslims but
for all humanity. He added that he hoped the efforts of the OIC
would mobilize “sleeping consciences”, and would encourage the
Western world to show its support for Somalia. Prime Minister
Erdogan is now visiting Somalia where he plans to visit relief camps
to draw international attention to the problem.
Early this week, the World Bank has announced it is going to provide
$686 million for medium term support for Ethiopia and Kenya to deal
with the effects of drought and high food prices, to improve social
protection and foster economic recovery and drought resilience for
the region. Initially, it will target the most vulnerable by
enhancing the existing safety net programs. In the longer term the
Bank will focus on building resilience to droughts including
investments in drought risk reduction and risk financing as well as
climate-smart agricultural practices.
According to the UN Humanitarian Coordinator for Somalia, Mark
Bowden, a lot of progress is being made though there was still much
to be done, as “Somalia is at the epicenter of a regional crisis”.
There was now a need for better coordination with the proliferation
of so many organizations on the ground. There was still a shortfall
of half a billion dollars. The pledging conference hosted by the
African Union is scheduled to take place on Thursday next week here
in Addis Ababa. Aid agencies hope African leaders, and others, will
give generously and agree to a timetable of long-term investment in
policies to prevent future droughts reaching such disastrous levels
as this has done.
Last week, Human
Rights Watch issued a report on Somalia ‘“You Don’t Know Who to
Blame”: War Crimes in Somalia’, suggesting that serious violations
of international law were a major cause of the current humanitarian
crisis. The report claims all sides in Somalia were guilty of human
rights violations. Though it somewhat gratuitously, and implausibly,
adds Kenya and Ethiopia, neither of which are currently involved in
Somalia, to its list of those to share the blame for current
violations, for the first time HRW finally appears prepared to
accept Al-Shabaab’s real responsibility for violations. It still
manages, as in all its previous reports, to concentrate on AMISOM
and the TFG; however this time it has quoted at length accounts of
unrelenting daily repression and brutality in areas under Al-Shabaab
control, the harsh punishments, notably floggings and summary
executions, including public beheadings, the forcible recruitment of
children and adults, and its deprivation of humanitarian aid for
people. Even so, it continues automatically to accept at face value
almost all criticisms of AMISOM, though it did agree that AMISOM had
taken measures in recent months to minimize civilian casualties, and
the TFG. A TFG spokesperson said the government “utterly refuted the
allegation”. He noted that HRW’s admission that reliable figures
were hard to come by indicated that HRW was “out of touch with the
reality on the ground”. He added that HRW hadn’t bothered to give
the TFG a chance to respond to the allegations. The spokesperson
said the TFG took its responsibility to protect civilians seriously
and took “extreme caution under extremely difficult circumstances
when conducting operations”.
***************
top |
|
Prime Minister Meles on an official visit to China
Prime Minister Meles returned to Ethiopia earlier this week after a
successful five day (August 11th to 15th)
official visit to China, during which he held talks with President
Hu Jintao, Premier Wen Jiabao, Chairman Wu Bangguo of the National
People’s Congress Standing Committee and other officials. He also
attended the opening ceremony of the 26th Summer
Universiade being held in Shenzhen. Prime Minister Meles has visited
China on several other occasions, in 1995 and in 2004 as well as
co-chairing the Beijing Summit of the China Africa Forum in November
2006 with President Hu. President Hu Jintao welcomed Prime Minister
Meles and expressed the deep sympathy of the Chinese people over the
effects of the drought in Ethiopia. He said relevant Chinese
departments would be sending food aid to Ethiopia as soon as
possible. China had announced plans to provide 90 million yuan ($14
million) of emergency food aid to the Horn of Africa in late July.
President Hu said Sino-African relations had made significant
progress as a result of the Chinese-Africa Forum and the two sides
were working on developing a new strategic partnership. China, he
said, is ready to improve communication and cooperation with
Ethiopia and other African countries in the interests of advancing
this strategic partnership.
During the talks with Premier Wen Jiabao, the Chinese Prime Minister
announced that China would be providing an additional 353 million
yuan ($55.28 million) in emergency food aid to Ethiopia and other
drought affected countries. Prime Minister Wen said Ethiopia was a
sincere friend and an important partner of China and he pledged
support to the Growth and Transformation Plan, whose focal areas of
course include expansion of railway and telecommunications
infrastructure. China, said Prime Minister Wen, would enhance
cooperation in electricity, transportation and other infrastructural
construction, expand industrial investment and technology transfer,
and help build an efficient agriculture sector and achieve
sustainable economic and social development. On the international
level, he said China would coordinate with Ethiopia to push for the
Group of 20 to establish a sound environment for Africa’s stability
and development. In response, Prime Minister Meles said he
appreciated China’s emergency food aid to Ethiopia and other drought
hit countries. This demonstrated its firm partnership and sincere
friendship. He noted China’s long-standing economic aid and support
to Ethiopia which had greatly improved Ethiopia’s capacity for
self-development. Ethiopia, he said, was ready to further enhance
mutually beneficial cooperation in trade, investment and technology,
and develop bilateral relations.
A number of agreements were signed during the visit including a $500
million loan agreement with the Chinese Export and Import Bank.
According to the Minister of Finance and Economic Development, Ato
Sofian Ahmed, one of the delegation members accompanying Prime
Minister Meles, the loan would be used to implement a total of 15
projects. These are projects that have already been finalized and
will now be discussed with the Chinese government. Prime Minister
Meles also met with various businessmen and investors including shoe
manufacturers who expressed interest in investing in Ethiopia. He
conferred with officials and investors from the Hebei region on
cotton and textile industry development. The Prime Minister told
investors that Ethiopia would welcome their involvement, and
responded favorably to the request to establish an industrial zone
in Dire Dawa, emphasizing the government’s readiness to provide
incentives.
***************
top |
|
South Sudan becomes the 54th Member State of
the African Union
On Monday, the African Union
headquarters in Addis Ababa celebrated the official admission of
South Sudan as its 54th member State, adding a 54th
star to its flag. The celebration included a flag raising ceremony
inside the headquarters and at the main gate. Dr. Jean Ping,
Chairperson of the African Union Commission, extended a warm welcome
to General Salva Kiir Mayardit, President of the Republic of South
Sudan. Others attending the ceremony included Ato Hailemariam
Desalegn, Ethiopia’s Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign
Affairs, Ministers, AU Commissioners, the Deputy Executive Secretary
of the UN-ECA, Ambassadors, and an enthusiastic South Sudanese
Delegation.
Dr. Ping,
describing the event as historic for South Sudan and for the African
Continent, said the AU Commission had received far more than the
majority vote required for admission on July 27th. In his
capacity as legal representative of the Union, he formally declared
the Republic of South Sudan the 54th member of the Union
and officially welcomed it to the family of nations. Dr. Ping noted
that the birth of the new nation was the result of a peaceful
referendum, and he extended the appreciation of the AU to General
Salva Kiir and General Omar El Bashir for the efforts they had made
to achieve this success. He also reminded the two governments that
there were some extremely important outstanding issues and appealed
to both to deal with them peacefully and in accordance with existing
agreements, and to avoid any unilateral action that might complicate
the situation. He recalled the promise of the two presidents on July
9th to maintain excellent relations devoid of bitterness
and revenge, and appealed to them to make maximum efforts to keep to
their promise: “the single most profound and solemn message of peace
for all of Africa”. He also appealed to the leadership of both
nations to work resolutely towards ensuring lasting peace and
stability and friendly relations between their two countries.
Recalling the African Union’s support for full implementation of the
CPA, Dr. Ping stressed the availability of the AU and of its
commitment to actively assist the common search for long-lasting
good relations between Sudan and South Sudan.
Dr. Ping took the
opportunity to emphasize the AU’s appreciation to the UN, IGAD and
to Prime Minister Meles, for their assistance, under the
facilitation of the African Union High Level Implementation Panel,
chaired by Thabo Mbeki, to help realize the agreement on temporary
security and administrative arrangements in Abyei, reached in Addis
Ababa in June. He said the African Union would remain committed and
engaged to ensure the recent agreements on maintaining stability and
security along the common border zone would be kept. Dr. Ping, who
reminded the people of South Sudan that they must be the main
architects of their success in overcoming difficulties on the road
to development, noted that the African Union and the international
community were well aware of the tremendous challenges South Sudan
faced. He announced the AU Ministerial Committee on Post-Conflict
Reconstruction and Development for Sudan was planning to shortly
hold an African Solidarity Conference with a view to mobilizing
support from inside and outside Africa for the new nation.
General Salva Kiir
Mayardit, President of the Republic of South Sudan, said South Sudan
affirmed its commitment “to live in peace with our brothers and
sisters in Sudan.” He reiterated his leadership’s commitment to
realize the expectations of its people for lasting peace, stability
and socio-economic development, and to build the new nation to the
satisfaction of the people of South Sudan and of the friends of
South Sudan, promising to use oil money to fuel agriculture to feed
the people. He called on the AU, the regional and the international
community to extend their support to South Sudan’s reconstruction
efforts. He reaffirmed the readiness of the leaders and people of
South Sudan to live in harmony with the leadership, brothers and
sisters of the Republic of Sudan, promising to do everything
possible to realize a smooth and successful transition, as South
Sudan “assumes its right place” at the AU and the UN.
Meanwhile, South
Sudan’s Foreign Minister, Deng Alor Kuol, underlined South Sudan’s
commitment to the AU when he said that it was prepared to send
troops to AMISOM in Somalia. He was quoted as saying that it was
part of South Sudan’s responsibility “to help our Somali brothers
and sisters achieve peace”. He added: "We, as Africans, must be in
the lead to alleviate problems before we ask the Western World or
anyone else to come and help us.” Following talks with Deputy Prime
Minister and Foreign Minister, Hailemariam Desalegn, on Tuesday, he
said South Sudan was keen to forge strong ties with Ethiopia. He
said that the two countries had agreed to work closely on various
economic activities including power generation, trade and capacity
building. A joint ministerial committee, expected to hold its first
meeting in September, was currently being formed to further
strengthen bilateral relations. South Sudan has also offered to
mediate between Ethiopia and Eritrea, and President Kiir said he
would shuttle between Addis Ababa and Asmara until normal relations
were re-established.
***************
top |
|
Eritrea’s Publicity Stunts aren’t overtures for peace
Whatever Eritrea is
currently saying about its behavior, real or intended, it is
certainly clear enough from the intemperate and extravagant letter
sent by President Isaias to Secretary-General Ban ki-Moon
on the 31st of July
2011
that dialogue with
Ethiopia is not meant to be on the menu. Indeed, his unbridled and
inaccurate comments suggest he has every intention of continuing the
series of destabilizing activities against Ethiopia and elsewhere in
the Horn of Africa for which the UN Monitoring Group has provided so
much evidence.
It is hardly a
surprise. Eritrea has gone to war with literally all its neighbors.
When direct military confrontation has failed, as in the case of its
open aggression and invasion of Ethiopia, Eritrea has subsequently
resorted to the use of insurgents and extremist groups to try
destabilization. In fact, this pattern of behavior has been too
obvious to be hidden, irrespective of any diplomatic efforts to the
contrary. As the UN Monitoring Group made it clear in its recent
report, the evidence that Eritrea has been supporting, financing and
directly executing various terrorist campaigns in the entire region
is compelling, even overwhelming.
Eritrea’s Permanent
Mission to the UN has joined in the collection of denials,
recriminations and fallacious allegations that make up the regime’s
increasingly agitated campaign to try and turn the international
community’s attention away from its activities and from the
Monitoring Group’s detailed evidence. As usual, it has once again
recycled the usual invective against Ethiopia though it has, less
usually, avoided its usual claim that the whole world is conspiring
against Eritrea. For the moment it appears to be just Ethiopia, and,
of course, the United States.
The central element of Eritrea’s statement is its oft-repeated claim
that the source of all the problems in the region is the so-called
‘unresolved border dispute’ with Ethiopia. Perversely, Eritrea’s
leaders blame everyone for their alleged frustration with what they
claim is the international community’s failure to force Ethiopia to
implement the demarcation of the border between the two countries.
Their argument is apparently that only by Eritrea openly and
repeatedly defying international law and ordinary commonsense can
they attract international attention to their supposed grievance. As
the UN Monitoring Group report says this is “routinely cited by
Asmara as justification for its support to Ethiopia's armed
opposition groups such as the ONLF and OLF.” It added that whatever
Eritrea’s frustration with the border issue, “the means by which the
leadership in Asmara apparently intends to pursue its objectives are
no longer proportional or rational.”
The cynicism, and irrationality, of the Eritrean argument is very
clear. Ethiopia has loudly and repeatedly reiterated its readiness
to demarcate the border between Ethiopia and Eritrea in accordance
with the delimitation decision of the Boundary Commission and
resolve all outstanding issues between the two countries through
dialogue. It has been seven years since the Ethiopian parliament
passed a resolution in 2004 to accept the Boundary Commission’s
delimitation decision, to “resolve the dispute between Ethiopia and
Eritrea only through peaceful means” and to “start dialogue
immediately with a view to implementing the Ethiopia-Eritrea
Boundary Commission’s decision in a manner consistent with the
promotion of sustainable peace and brotherly ties between the two
peoples.”
That is, almost verbatim, what the AU Summit said last June. It
hasn’t prevented the Eritrea’s leaders from trying to twist and
distort the text. As always, they appear to believe semantic
sleights of hand can substitute for genuine evidence. The Eritrean
Permanent Representative’s statement insinuates that an AU decision
was passed at the Malabo Summit absolving Eritrea from sanctions.
This could hardly be more inaccurate. In fact, what occurred at
Malabo was neither exoneration nor exculpation of Eritrea; nor was
the issue of tightening sanctions raised, either by Ethiopia or by
IGAD. No call was made there to tighten sanctions against Eritrea;
the issue wasn’t even mentioned. IGAD, however, at its own separate
summit, a week or so later, after detailed discussion did call for
the sanctions to be strengthened because of the evidence of
Eritrea’s continued and repeated violations of Security Council
Resolutions 1844 and 1907.
The reality of what
occurred at Malabo was that the AU, as part of its look at the
various unresolved problems in the continent, reiterated “its
concern over the continued impasse in the peace process between
Ethiopia and Eritrea.” Eritrea’s statement claims that AU Summit in
Malabo called on both Eritrea and Ethiopia “to peacefully resolve
their dispute, normalize their relations and lay the foundation for
lasting peace and security in the Horn of Africa.” This is exactly
what Ethiopia has been saying all along. Ethiopia’s repeated offer
of dialogue with the Eritrean government to resolve differences
peacefully and in a civilized manner has however fallen on deaf
ears. As the Government’s most recent statement noted “Ethiopia has
consistently offered dialogue; the Government of Eritrea has, as
consistently, refused it.”
Despite the face of
the mass of evidence now made public by the Monitoring Group, the
regime in Asmara has continued to deny any responsibility. It is
ignoring the detailed proof of its activities to try to play the
victim rather than the perpetrator. It apparently hopes to wiggle
out of the sanctions while continuing to try and inflict more damage
and destruction. It would be more appropriate, and easier, to accept
responsibility for its past activities, to try to mend fences with
its neighbors and the international community by moving even a
little towards normal behavior.
Rather than do
this, the regime’s latest statement attacks Ethiopia claiming that
the call for tightening of sanctions comes from Ethiopia alone. In
fact, IGAD has been consistently unanimous in its view of the
necessity of tightening sanctions and making them realistic.
Eritrea’s Permanent Mission in New York also fabricates allegations
about the aim of the sanctions and the effects, falsely claiming
that IGAD is trying to bring a halt to remittances. As Deputy Prime
Minister and Foreign Minister Hailemariam specifically said when
speaking on behalf of IGAD members to the Security Council, the
sanctions regime should only be directed against the controversial
2% Diaspora tax, considered illegal by many. It must not be aimed at
the remittances on which so many thousands of Eritreans now depend.
That would be contrary to the publicly stated solidarity of all IGAD
member countries with the people of Eritrea. In fact, IGAD’s request
to the UN Security Council to tighten sanctions was very carefully
framed to avoid repercussions for the people of Eritrea. Sanctions,
as envisaged, will have no effect on the people of Eritrea. They
will target the specific actions of those in the Eritrean
leadership, named in the Monitoring Group report, and who threaten
peace and security in the region. They should also limit the ability
of such people to acquire and use funds from international mining
companies for further efforts at regional destabilization.
Eritrean officials
have, for quite some time now, been demanding time to rebut the
Monitoring Group’s evidence. They have so far failed to come up with
any single fact to suggest that any of the evidence in the Report is
unreliable, let alone inaccurate. The leaders of Eritrea have even
yet to acknowledge that they had a conflict with Djibouti, much less
a genuine desire to resolve the dispute. They have yet to recognize
the legitimacy of the TFG in Somalia and stop their open support for
extremists there. They have made no effort to become part of the
solution in the quest for peace in Somalia. In fact, only a few days
ago, the Eritrean regime actually launched a TV programme in Somali.
It is already clear that the intention is to further fan the flames
there.
When it comes to
Ethiopia, Eritrea has, of course, yet to assume any responsibility
for the series of campaigns waged at its behest including the
January plot to bomb Addis Ababa during the African Union Summit.
Indeed, it has hardly bothered to protest its innocence, or produce
any evidence to the contrary, but has rather been making appeals to
pity, falsely claiming Eritrea to be the victim, not the
perpetrator, of destabilizing campaigns. The Permanent
Representative’s letter even goes so far as to claim that the reason
why the UN Monitoring Group’s report should not be credible is
because Eritrea has always argued, since the days of its struggle
for independence, that it has been the victim of the world and
everybody has always been against it.
It is quite obvious
that the regime in Asmara, faced by the possibility of real and
effective sanctions, now wants to try and convince the international
community that it could be a law-abiding and sensible government
that has been wrongly accused of violating international law and
practice. It has even said it is taking “concrete steps to
reactivate its membership in IGAD” and “steps to strengthen its
relationship with the countries in the sub-region.” This indeed
sounds nice and comforting. It is however, clear, as we noticed
above, that this is not intended to include its neighbour, Ethiopia.
Equally, it shouldn’t be forgotten that as Eritrea returned to the
AU for the first time for nearly a decade at last January’s Summit,
it simultaneously planned a bombing campaign to try to disrupt that
very summit and turn “Addis Ababa into Bagdad”. It had already
dispatched three terrorist teams in a plot to bomb Addis Ababa at
the very same time it was telling the AU that it had decided to
re-open its representation in Addis Ababa.
The emptiness of
any indication that Eritrea’s is changing its policies is very clear
in its continued denial of any responsibility for its continued
destabilizing activities throughout the region. It begs a question
how a regime that has fallen out with its neighbors as a result of
well-documented and proven destabilization activities can
entertain the illusion that it can just walk back to where it once
was without even acknowledging for a second that it acted
unacceptably. The “concrete steps” to which it refers do not appear
to include any apologies. They look remarkably like a mere publicity
exercise, and not something that can be mistaken for a genuine
gesture towards peace and reconciliation. Mere gimmicks are simply
not enough. Eritrea must be made to understand that the only way to
strengthen relations with the countries in the sub-region” is
by a real and open change of policy and complete abandonment of all
its efforts to destabilize the Horn of Africa.
***************
top |
|
The UN
Monitoring Group Report; Eritrea’s EOD in Somalia and Uganda
Last week, we
looked at some of the detail of the of the UN Monitoring Report’s
evidence of Eritrea’s support for terrorism in Ethiopia and its
encouragement of armed opposition movements. This week, we will
concentrate on the evidence in the report of the activities of
Eritrea’s External Operations Directorate (EOD) in Somalia and
Uganda; on Eritrea’s support for Al-Shabaab and other extremist
groups in Somalia and for the terrorist activities that Al-Shabaab
have carried out against AMISOM and, of course, in Uganda, last
July.
The Monitoring
Group notes that Eritrean support to Somali armed groups goes back
to the time of the Eritrean Ethiopian war. After its invasion of
Ethiopia in May 1998, Eritrea moved quickly to try and open a
“second front” against Ethiopia by providing assistance to a Somali
warlord, Hussein Aydeed, and through him to the terrorist
organizations, the Oromo Liberation Front and the Ogaden National
Liberation Front. This had little effect during the war, but Eritrea
continued to support both organizations subsequently. Eritrean
involvement in Somalia significantly increased in mid 2006 after the
ICU took over in Mogadishu. Subsequently, after the defeat of the
ICU by Ethiopian and TFG forces, and the takeover of the TFG in
Mogadishu, this continued through the Alliance for the Re-Liberation
of Somalia, set up under Eritrean auspices in Asmara, and by the
support provided to Al-Shabaab.
Despite the
activities chronicled in previous Monitoring Group Reports of
details of arms supplies to the ICU, to Al-Shabaab and to other
groups, the Report notes Eritrea has consistently claimed a
“principled position of non-interference in the internal affairs of
Somalia”. However, it then adds very specifically: “new information
obtained by the Monitoring Group during the course of [its] mandate
not only confirms many previous allegations of Eritrean military
involvement, but also offers firm grounds to believe that Eritrea
still retains active linkages to Somali armed groups, principally
through the External Operations Directorate..”.
The Report details
documentary evidence of payments made in 2008 to a number of
individuals by the Eritrean Embassy in Nairobi. This includes
payment vouchers, receipts and tabulated records of payments, all of
which have been authenticated. The Report goes into considerable
detail with reference to particular named individuals, itemizing
their links to Al-Shabaab and the payments received. It adds that
additional testimonies and the financial records of certain
individuals indicate that this support has continued “to the
present, and that the Embassy of the State of Eritrea in Nairobi
continues to maintain and exploit a wide network of Somali contacts,
intelligence assets and agents of influence in Kenya.” Indeed,
sources in the Embassy, as well as recipients, confirmed such
payments are still being made, and the amount dispersed “is roughly
$80,000 per month”.
In response to
enquiries about flights from Asmara to Kismayo and other airports in
Somalia, the Report notes that the Government of Eritrea has
acknowledged operating a small number of flights for diplomatic and
humanitarian purposes and scheduled commercial flights. However it
refused to respond to requests for information about military
flights, as such requests “go well beyond the mandate of the Group
and seriously infringe on Eritrea’s sovereignty.” There have been
claims of flights between Kismayo and Asmara in March and April this
year, one of which reportedly brought 25 foreign fighters to Kismayo.
The Monitoring Group is careful to note that it has not been able to
independently confirm these reports.
In a lengthy case
study, Annex 8.5, the Report goes into considerable detail of the
activities of the External Operations Directorate and Eritrean
intelligence links with Somali armed opposition groups, in
particular giving details of the activities of Colonel Tewelde Habte
Negash, operating under the supervision of General Te’ame in the
External Operations Directorate. Along with Colonel Fitsum Yishak,
General Te’ame’s deputy, Colonel Negash has been involved in
training of armed opposition movements, though in his own case
largely those from Somalia.
The Report details
various eyewitness accounts of Colonel Negash’s activities from 2002
when he was providing timing devices for explosives to an OLF group.
A year later he was in the Eritrean Embassy in Nairobi providing
passports for members of the ONLF and other Somalis as well as
coordinating an airlift of ONLF fighters and weapons from Eritrea to
Dusamareb in Central Somalia near the border with Ethiopia's Somali
Regional State. After the ICU takeover of Mogadishu in June 2006,
“Negash spent considerable time in Mogadishu, coordinating support
to a variety of armed groups including the ICU and its militant wing
as well as the ONLF and the OLF.” He held a series of meetings with,
among others, Yusuf Indha’adde and Aden Hashi Ayrow. According to
ONLF members, he provided explosives training at this time, and
according to Al-Shabaab sources he was also involved in training for
suicide bombings and vehicle-borne explosives devices. Following the
defeat of the ICU in December 2006, Negash fled to Kenya with seven
other Eritrean officers.
The Report notes
that Colonel Negash was deported in 2008 from Kenya “at least in
part because of his alleged attempts to involve himself in ransom
negotiations for Somali pirates”. He then apparently travelled to
Uganda, continuing his activities there before returning to Kenya a
few months later when he was again deported for association with
Somali armed opposition cells in Kenya and Somalia. He had travelled
from Uganda, to Kenya and on to Somalia, with an Eritrean embassy
official from Nairobi, to meet members of Al-Shabaab. Despite these
deportations, Colonel Negash continued to maintain his involvement
with Somali opposition groups, and travelled to Hargeisa in late
September or early October 2010. According to captured ONLF
fighters, Colonel Negash was also involved in training programs in
Eritrea for the operation to infiltrate ONLF fighters into Ethiopia
via Somaliland in September 2010.
The Report adds
some details of the activities of a close associate of Colonel
Negash, Hannibal Khasay, who was also arrested and deported from
Kenya in June 2009. According to the report, he was involved in a
lucrative human trafficking network run by the Embassy of Eritrea in
Nairobi. After this, according to his own account he travelled back
and forth between Eritrea and Uganda where he was arrested in early
2011.
The Monitoring
Group concludes from its investigations of the movements of Colonel
Negash and others that the Eritrean presence in Uganda and South
Sudan indicated “a wider Eritrean intelligence effort dedicated to
supporting armed groups in the region in addition to Al-Shabaab.” It
said it had identified a group of at least four other Eritrean
intelligence officers deployed to Uganda and South Sudan and headed
by a Colonel Yonas. Colonel Yonas and Colonel Negash reportedly met
regularly with Eritrea’s then Consul-General in Juba, Alem Negash.
Alem Negash is a former intelligence officer who worked previously
at the Eritrean embassy in Khartoum and in Nairobi where he managed
Eritrean relations with Somalia.
The Monitoring
Group Report adds that it also received a report from Eritrean
sources of a visit by an Eritrean intelligence officer to Mbale in
eastern Uganda to meet Somali armed opposition members. The
Monitoring Group notes that Mbale has a significant Somali
population and it was a location used to store some of the materials
used in the Al-Shabaab July 2010 bombings in Kampala.
The Monitoring
Group concludes its case study of Eritrean intelligence links with
Somali armed groups in the region by suggesting that Colonel Tewelde
Habte Negash’s continued activity in Uganda, South Sudan, Kenya and
Somalia, “represents a threat to peace and security in the region”.
Given his past record of involvement with armed opposition movements
throughout the region, and his senior role in the External
Operations Directorate of Eritrea headed by General Te’ame, the
Report “recommends vigilance on the part of regional governments”
about his activity.
Next week we will
consider what the Monitoring Group Report reveals about the nature
of the Eritrean regime itself, before going on to look at the wider
implications of the Report and what should be the response to its
conclusions.
***************
top |
|