Thursday, November 20, 2008

Somali Puppet Government 'Near Collapse'

Sunday, November 16, 2008
14:27 Mecca time, 11:27 GMT

Somali government 'near collapse'

Opposition fighters have captured several towns across Somalia

Somalia's president has said his government is "on the verge of total collapse" as opposition fighters have taken control of large parts of the country.

"Most of the country is in the hands of Islamists and we are only in Mogadishu and Baidoa, where there is daily war," Abdullahi Yusuf told 100 Somali legislators in neighbouring Kenya in remarks broadcast late on Saturday.

The transitional government in Somalia has struggled to enforce its control over the chaotic country and in 2006 needed assistance from the Ethiopian military to retake large areas of the country controlled by the Islamic Courts Union.

Since then government forces and their Ethiopian allies have come under near daily attack as the oppostion fighters have gradually re-established their influence.

"We, ourselves, are behind the problems and we are accountable in this world and in the hereafter. Islamists have been capturing all towns and now control Elasha. It is every man for himself if the government collapses," Yusuf said.

"The Islamists kill city cleaners, they will not spare legislators."

Cabinet disagreement

Yusuf blamed his government's ineffectiveness partly on disagreements between him and Nur Hassan Hussein, Somalia's prime minister.

Somalia has failed to name the new cabinet despite being urged to do so by leaders from the Inter-Governmental Authority on Development (IGAD) - Ethiopia, Djibouti, Kenya, Somalia, Sudan and Uganda - at a meeting in October.

"The prime minister gave me a list of new cabinet ministers but I do not know how to approve names of those who destroyed our government when the constructive ones were excluded," Yusuf said.

Hussein said Yusuf bore the responsibility for the crisis within the government.

"The Somali president is responsible for the failure of the transitional federal government to achieve its goal of forming a new cabinet," he told reporters in Nairobi.

"It is unfortunate that the president has become the first to oppose the IGAD [Inter-Governmental Authority on Development] directives though he was one of the signatories."

Opposition influence

The president's remarks came after witnesses said that fighters from the al-Shabaab movement had captured the port town on Barawe, about 180km from the capital Mogadishu.

Earlier in the week the group seized the nearby town of Merka, which has a strategically important airstrip.

Even in Mogadishu, which remains nominally under government control, al- Shabaab fighters carry out public punishments, conduct training exercises and present themselves as an alternative government.

Source: Agencies

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