US to
build ties with breakaway Somali republics
By MATTHEW LEE (AP)
NEW YORK — The Obama administration plans to strengthen ties with
two breakaway republics in northern Somalia to blunt a growing
threat from Islamist extremists accused of links to al-Qaida, a
senior U.S. official said Friday.
The U.S. will begin "aggressive" engagement with the self-declared
northern republics of Somaliland and Puntland, while continuing
support of Somalia's weak central government, as part of an effort
to prevent the spread of radical ideology espoused by the al-Shabab
militia, said Johnnie Carson, the top U.S. diplomat for Africa.
Carson said the U.S. will also promote development in areas
controlled by local clans in south-central Somalia that are not
allied with either the government or al-Shabab.
The planned U.S. effort to build relations with Somaliland and
Puntland, which have been largely peaceful while the rest of Somalia
has descended into chaos with no functioning central government
since 1991, marks an important shift in U.S. policy. Al-Shabab has
emerged as a significant threat to regional and international
security in recent years.
"We think that both of these parts of Somalia have been zones of
relative political and civil stability and we think they will, in
fact, be a bulwark against extremism and radicalism that might
emerge from the south," Carson said.
"In the past, we have not engaged these areas, political entities,
aggressively," he said. "We will now start to do so."
Carson said the U.S. would not establish formal diplomatic relations
with the two entities or recognize their independence, but would
help their governments with agriculture, water, health and education
projects. Diplomats at the U.S. Embassy in Nairobi, Kenya, will lead
the effort and increase their informal visits to Somaliland and
Puntland.
The aim is "to see how we can help them improve their capacity to
provide services to their people," Carson said.
Somaliland declared its independence from Somalia in 1991 and has
remained relatively peaceful while southern Somalia has degenerated
into anarchy. Somaliland has its own security and police forces,
justice system and currency, but it is not recognized by any other
nation. Puntland, also in the north, declared itself an autonomous
state in 1998.
Carson said the U.S. also plans to provide more aid to Somalia's
Transitional Federal Government, which is under siege by al-Shabab
and supported by an African Union military mission dominated by
Ugandan troops.
He did not elaborate, but the U.S. has in the past supplied the
African troops with weapons and other equipment and is providing
training to Somali security forces.
To counter al-Shabab, Carson said, the U.S. would also look to
support "local governments, clans and sub-clans" in south-central
Somalia that do not back either the militia or the federal
administration.
"We will look for opportunities to work with these groups to see if
we can identify ways of supporting their development initiatives and
activities," he said.
Al-Shabab aims to overthrow the internationally backed central
government and impose a strict brand of Islam countrywide.
The group claimed responsibility for the deadly bombings that killed
scores of civilians watching the World Cup finals in Uganda in July.
Al-Shabab said it sought to avenge the deaths of civilians allegedly
killed by shelling by African Union peacekeepers.
Source:AP
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