Africa Horn |
South Sudan's rebel leader agrees new ceasefire with president |
2014-05-10 |
[REUTERS] South Sudanese President Salva Kiir and rebel commander Riek Machar signed a ceasefire deal on Friday after coming under growing international pressure to end ethnic fighting that has raised fears of genocide. Friday's deal was made at a meeting in Ćthiopia that was the first time the two men had met face-to-face since violence erupted ![]() The men agreed that a transitional government offered the "best chance" to take the country towards elections next year, though there was no immediate decision on who would be part of an interim administration. "Now that we have come to our senses ... dialogue is the only answer to whatever problem we had," Kiir said after a signing ceremony in Addis Ababa's presidential palace. "We will continue to move in the right direction." The truce will take effect within 24 hours and both sides agreed to disengage their forces and refrain from any provocative actions, said Seyoum Mesfin, lead mediator from the regional IGAD grouping. |
Link |
Africa Horn |
Regional leaders gather for South Sudan crisis summit |
2014-03-14 |
[Egypt Independent] East African heads of state gathered in Addis Ababa Thursday in the latest push for peace in war-torn South Sudan, where almost three months of conflict has left thousands dead. Leaders from the East African bloc, the Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD), gathered in the Æthiopian capital to "deliberate on the current situation in the Republic of South Sudan", a statement read. South Sudanese media said President Salva Kiir is due to attend, but no direct talks between Kiir's government and the rebels were due to take place until next week. Ministers met late Wednesday ahead of the main summit, including officials from Djibouti, Æthiopia, Kenya, Somalia, Sudan, South Sudan and Uganda. Officials discussed a report from Seyoum Mesfin, IGAD's chief mediator to slow-moving peace talks, the bloc said in a statement. South Sudan's government has been at war with rebel groups since December 15, when a clash between troops loyal to Kiir and those loyal to sacked vice president Riek Machar snowballed into full-scale fighting across the world's newest nation. |
Link |
Africa Horn |
African leaders agree to increase Somalia force as summit ends |
2010-07-28 |
[The Nation (Nairobi)] African Union leaders wrapping up a three-day summit today in Kampala agreed to send thousands of extra troops to reinforce its military contingent battling al Qaeda-linked insurgents in Somalia. More than 30 heads of state approved a request by an east African regional body to send 2,000 extra soldiers to the war-torn capital Mogadishu. However, the leaders were still grappling with whether to completely change the mandate of the AU Mission in Somalia (AMISOM), currently tasked with protecting the fragile Somali government from the Islamist rebels. "This summit has just approved the requests made by the Inter-Governmental Authority on Development (IGAD)," Ethiopia's Foreign Minister Seyoum Mesfin told AFP. The IGAD earlier this month pledged to send the additional troops to boost Amisom's current force of 6,000 Burundian and Ugandan soldiers to its intended full strength. The permanent secretary of Uganda's foreign ministry James Mugume said the summit was yet to agree on whether to give the force a more aggressive mandate under chapter seven of the UN charter. "The decision about the mandate is still being taken, but I think there is a realisation that chapter seven is difficult," Mr Mugume told AFP. "What we are hoping for is chapter six and a half. It involves an adjustment in the rules of engagement that allows us to act more robustly. "A change to six and a half would still require consultations with the UN Security Council," he explained. Ugandan army spokesman Felix Kulayigye however said that Amisom could now launch pre-emptive strikes following new rules of engagement. "Now the forces are free to attack in a pre-emptive manner," Mr Kulayigye told AFP. "If there is a realisation that you are about to be attacked you are mandated to attack first." Somalia's hardline Shebab militia fighting to topple the Western-backed government of President Sharif Sheikh Ahmed demonstrated their new regional dimension when they claimed July 11 bombings in Kampala that killed 76 people. They said the attack was to punish Uganda for its contribution to the AMISOM force, which the insurgents blame for killing civilians in Mogadishu. The Ethiopian foreign minister urged the immediate deployment of the additional forces. "We all think that AMISOM must be reinforced immediately, along with the means of action of the Somali transitional government," Mr Seyoum said. However, leaders at the Kampala summit acknowledged that military intervention alone would not resolve Somalia's conflict which has raged for nearly two decades. "The priority must therefore be to reinforce the security forces, the police, and the civil and financial institutions of the transitional government," Mr Seyoum added. The Shabab, whose leadership has pledged allegiance to Osama bin Laden, currently controls around 80 per cent of the Horn of Africa nation, with the embattled government confined to a few blocks in Mogadishu. US Assistant Secretary of State for Africa Johnnie Carson supported the Amisom troop surge as a means of defeating the radical militia posing a regional and international threat. African Union Commission chief Jean Ping said earlier that Guinea was ready to send a battalion to Somalia and predicted that the mission could soon swell to 10,000 soldiers. The bloc's commissioner for peace and security, Ramtane Lamamra, said it was only "a question of a few short weeks" before the reinforcements arrive in Somalia and render AMISOM -- which deployed in March 2007 -- "more robust". |
Link |
Africa Horn |
Estranged Somalia gov't leaders agree to cooperate |
2008-08-27 |
ADDIS ABABA - Somalia's President Abdullahi Yusuf and his prime minister signed a deal on Tuesday to work together after a weeks-long rift that threatened to wreck their interim government. Yusuf fell out with Prime Minister Nur Hassan Hussein earlier this month after Hussein sacked Mogadishu's powerful mayor, a key ally of the president. Both men have been locked in crisis talks for days with officials in neighbouring Ethiopia. "We hope the agreement will end the differences between the Somali leaders," Ethiopia's Foreign Minister Seyoum Mesfin said after the pair signed the deal in Addis Ababa. "Ten days ago, the very existence of TFG (transitional federal government) was at a critical point. The differences were a deciding factor that makes or breaks the transitional period, including the peace agreement in Djibouti." |
Link |
Africa Horn | |
Troops shell Somali market killing 11 | |
2008-03-30 | |
At least 11 people were killed in Mogadishu on Saturday when troops at the Villa Somalia presidential palace returned fire against Islamist insurgents who attacked it with mortar bombs, witnesses said. President Abdullahi Yusuf was meeting Ethiopian Foreign Minister Seyoum Mesfin there at the time, an
Residents said Ethiopian soldiers guarding Yusuf then launched shells at Bakara Market in the city below, killing a number of people and wounding dozens more. "Seven people including a woman died in the money changers' area when more than eight mortar bombs struck several parts of Bakara," shopkeeper Muse Ahmed told Reuters. "Four people were killed inside the market's food section," said another local trader, Yonis Abshir. The sprawling market is notorious for its open-air arms bazaar, and has been the site of frequent skirmishes between guerrillas and government troops backed by Ethiopian forces. | |
Link |
Africa Horn |
Ethiopia reopens its embassy in Mogadishu |
2007-05-28 |
(SomaliNet) The Ethiopian government has reopened on Sunday its embassy in the Somalia capital Mogadishu for the first time in 16 years to restore the relationship between the two countries as the Ethiopian foreign minister Seyoum Mesfin visits Somalia. In the reopening ceremony, attended by officials of Ethiopia and Somalia governments and officials from the African peacekeepers from Uganda, has been held inside the embassy near the presidential palace. Security was tightened very highly around the area of the embassy and the president compound as heavily armed Ethiopian, Ugandan and Somalia forces were deployed in all the streets in and out the area. Somali interim president Abdulahi Yusuf Ahmed and his prime minister Ali Mohamed Gedi and other government officials were present at the ceremony. I am very happy to welcome you with this ceremony of the reopening of the Ethiopian embassy here in Mogadishu, Mr. President and Mr. prime minister, I am thanking you for honoring us by your presence in this historical occasion of reopening of the embassy after more than 16 years, said Mr. Mesfin. |
Link |
Africa Horn |
Ethiopia in contact with kidnappers, rules out rescue |
2007-03-12 |
Ethiopia said on Saturday it was in contact with an armed group that kidnapped five European and eight locals in a remote northern region -- but ruled out a military operation to rescue them. "Those who are responsible are being reached through different channels, and we are hoping that these people would be freed unharmed and safe," Foreign Minister Seyoum Mesfin told reporters in the northern town of Mekele. Amid speculation British special forces were in the area, Mesfin said a rescue mission was not being prepared. "We still have not reached that stage. So let's rule out this option for the moment, because the safety and the security of these people is most important for us," he said. "We should focus on saving the lives of these people." |
Link |
Africa Horn |
Ethiopia: 'Missing tourists held by kidnappers' |
2007-03-10 |
A European tour group that went missing last week is "safe and secure" but being held by unknown kidnappers near the disputed border of Ethiopia and Eritrea, Ethiopia's foreign minister said. "Last evening I heard they are safe and secure," Foreign Minister Seyoum Mesfin told The Associated Press Friday, citing tribesman in the remote, hostile region who say they have seen the group. "They are in good condition. We don't even know yet who the kidnappers are." Seyoum said tribal elders had reported the group was in the Afar region, which straddles the border of Ethiopia and archrival Eritrea, and that they appeared to be well. While the region's ancient salt mines and volcanoes offer a spectacular, moonlike landscape for tourists, bandits operate there and tourists must have armed guides. The group - five employees of the British Embassy in Addis Ababa or their relatives - were abducted along with 13 Ethiopian drivers or translators March 1. Four of the Europeans are believed to be British citizens, including one of Italian origin; the other is French. Five of the Ethiopians are believed to have escaped or been released. |
Link |
Africa Horn | |
Somalia's leader sacks government | |
2006-08-07 | |
The leaders of Somalia's crisis-ridden interim government say they have resolved their differences and agreed to dissolve the cabinet. Some 40 ministers have quit the cabinet over the prime minister's opposition to peace talks with the Islamist militias who control the capital, Mogadishu. The crisis had caused a rift between President Abdullahi Yusuf and Prime Minister Ali Mohamed Ghedi. Mr Ghedi's government controls little more than Baidoa, where it is based. "The bloated cabinet of Ali Mohamed Ghedi's government did not do anything during its tenure," President Yusuf announced in parliament. "From today onwards, the government has been dissolved - only the prime minister will remain." Mr Ghedi was present during the announcement, which reportedly follows the intervention of Ethiopian Foreign Minister Seyoum Mesfin as mediator between the two factions in the Somali government.
The interim cabinet originally had over 100 members, not all of whom had been approved by parliament. In the past 10 days a succession of ministers left the government, and Mr Ghedi narrowly survived a parliamentary vote of no confidence on Saturday. Mr Ghedi's opponents within the government and parliament believe he should have done more to seek a settlement with the Union of Islamic Courts, whose militia have taken control of Mogadishu in recent months. | |
Link |
Africa Horn |
Sheikh Aweys: Ethiopia owns Somalia Baidoa government |
2006-08-07 |
![]() He blamed the TFG of taking orders from Addis Ababa which he says has great influence in the movement of President Abdullahi Yusuf. The government in Baidoa belongs to Ethiopia and the arrival of the Ethiopian official in Somalia Baidoa town indicates that Addis Ababa government dedicates the transitional federal government to what ever they do, Sheikh Aweys said adding Ethiopia over looks the government to fulfill its interests in Somalia. Sheikh Hassan Aweys has also warned the constant intervention by Ethiopian troops in Somalia sending again a strong massage to the world community to hold back Ethiopia from Somalia. He said if the world powers do not confirm the withdrawal of Ethiopian soldiers from our country things would change drastically and this will led more bloodshed in horn of Africa and create more crises inside Ethiopia. |
Link |
Africa Horn | |
Eritrea Refuses Meeting With U.N. Official | |
2005-12-14 | |
ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP) - Eritrean officials refused to meet the U.N. peacekeeping chief, who visited the country Tuesday in an effort to defuse tensions along the Eritrea-Ethiopia border amid fears of a new war, a U.N. official said. Both Horn of Africa nations have been massing troops near the border, while Eritrea has been restricting the work of U.N. peacekeepers. Eritrea is angry that the United Nations has failed to force Ethiopia to withdraw its troops from a town awarded to Eritrea by an international commission set up under a 2000 peace agreement. U.N. Undersecretary-General for Peacekeeping Jean-Marie Guehenno was pressing for Eritrea to reverse its order for the expulsion of U.S., Canadian and European members of the U.N. mission monitoring the tense border, the U.N. official said. Eritrean officials were unlikely to meet Guehenno anytime soon, the official said on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak with journalists. On Wednesday, the United Nations was to begin pulling out the first 20 of the 180 peacekeeping staff affected by last week's expulsion order. The nearly 3,300-strong U.N. force is composed of peacekeepers and military observers from some 40 countries. The largest contingent, with more than 1,500 troops, is from India. Earlier Tuesday, Ethiopia's Prime Minister Meles Zenawi said his country needed to maintain enough troops along border to keep Eritrea from starting a new war. ``If the Eritrean government believes that it can ensure victory, there is no doubt it will do what it can to wage a war,'' Meles said in a report to parliament. ``The only alternative is to show the Eritrean government they will not win anything if a war is started.'' Diplomats estimate the two nations have 380,000 troops along the 600-mile border - about 130,000 on the Ethiopian side and 250,000 on the Eritrean side.
| |
Link |