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Mogadishu 05,Nov.07 ( Sh.M.Network)-An
exiled leader of Somalia's Islamists has rejected a call by Somalia's
new prime minister for talks to try to end 16 years of conflict
and stem a year-long insurgency that has killed some 6,000 civilians.
"Our problem is not with the old prime minister or the new
prime minister. Our problem is Ethiopia's occupation," Sheikh
Sharif Ahmed, who is now chairman of the opposition Alliance For
the Re-Liberation of Somalia (ARS), told Reuters.
Ahmed's Islamist courts' movement ruled Mogadishu for six months
last year, until it was chased away by Ethiopia's army backing forces
from the interim Somali government.
"If the Ethiopian occupation is removed then everything is
possible. But before that, it would be fruitless to speak about
talks between the prime minister and the opposition," Ahmed
added in an interview in Eritrea late on Tuesday.
Prime Minister Nur Hassan Hussein has had a rocky start since being
appointed at the end of November and naming his cabinet at the weekend.
Five ministers have already quit, in a blow for plans to unify a
government paralysed by in-fighting for nearly three years.
Hussein took over from former Prime Minister Ali Mohamed Gedi, who
resigned after a long feud with the president that frustrated their
Western backers.
On Tuesday, a security official said President Abdullahi Yusuf --
a long-surviving liver transplant patient -- was in "serious
condition" in a Nairobi hospital.
But his doctors played down the health threat.
Ahmed, who has been seen as a relative moderate among the Islamists,
declined to say what, if any, would be the consequences of Yusuf's
illness.
Ethiopia's enemy, Eritrea, backs Sharif's ARS movement, which is
an umbrella Somali opposition group of Islamists, former parliamentarians
and diaspora members.
Hardline Islamists have led an insurgency against the government
and Ethiopian troops throughout 2007. A rights group said this week
nearly 6,000 civilians had died in fighting in Mogadishu, which
has also seen a massive refugee exodus
Source (Reuters)
Shabelle
Media Network Somalia
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