Arab News

Security deal to strengthen fight against Al-Shabab

-

LONDON: Somalia’s government and its foreign backers have signed a security pact which they presented as a road map toward building a functional national army capable of taking on the fight against Al-Shabab militants.

The Al- Qaeda- linked militant group has lost much of the territory it once controlled in Somalia, including the capital Mogadishu, but its deadly attacks remain one of the main obstacles to stability in the Horn of Africa country.

A London conference on Somalia also heard that the UN was increasing its appeal for the country by $900 million to a total of $1.5 billion to allow aid agencies to cope with a severe drought that is causing a humanitari­an crisis.

UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres said the extra funding was needed because more than 6 million Somalis — about half the country’s population — were in need of assistance.

He said 275,000 malnourish­ed children were at risk of starvation.

The conference tackled a wide range of issues, from Somalia’s requests for debt relief to calls for easier access to the internatio­nal banking system, but British Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson said the security pact was the main achievemen­t.

The pact, a 17- page document released at the end of the conference, follows a detailed agreement reached in April between Somalia’s fledgling federal government and its member states on how to unify their disparate forces into a national army and police force.

“What the internatio­nal community wants to do now is to back that security architectu­re, and the stronger and more robust it is ... the more the internatio­nal community will be able to come in with support,” said Johnson.

As things stand, an African Union force made up of soldiers from Kenya, Ethiopia, Uganda, Burundi and Djibouti is doing most of the fighting against Al-Shabab insurgents, but it wants to start withdrawin­g from Somalia in 2018.

The AU force has clawed back control of most of Somalia’s main towns and cities since the militants were driven out of Mogadishu from 2010, but it is overstretc­hed and funding is a constant challenge.

Somalia’s President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed, who took office in February after a complex Western- backed electoral process, called for a lifting of the arms embargo on Somalia to give his armed forces an advantage over Al-Shabab fighters.

“Al- Shabab has AK- 47s and the Somali national forces have the same equipment, the same weapons, and that’s why this war has been lingering for 10 years. And if we don’t have more sophistica­ted and better weaponry, this war will definitely continue for another 10 years,” he told a news conference.

Mohamed said he was not asking for that now, but rather when Somalia had achieved some of the milestones set out in the security pact. He talked about a period of eight months or more.

Johnson said now was not the time to consider lifting the arms embargo.

“We should not be thinking of doing it that way round. The priority should be to help the Somali forces to get to a condition ... where they are able to take on Al-Shabab,” he said.

Somalia has been mired in violent chaos since 1991, when warlords overthrew dictator Siad Barre and then turned against each other.

Analysts say the national army is poorly equipped and underfunde­d, with troops sometimes going unpaid for months.

Partly as a result of that, a range of regional forces including clan militias, the Ethiopia-backed Ahlu Sunnah Wal Jamea militia, the US- supported Puntland forces and a regional force in Jubaland have been reluctant to join a centralise­d force.

The April agreement between the federal government and member states and Thursday’s security pact are aimed at overcoming these difficulti­es.

 ??  ?? Turkey’s Prime Minister Binali Yildirim takes part in the Somalia Conference in London. The conference was aimed at improving stability and prosperity in Somalia. (AP)
Turkey’s Prime Minister Binali Yildirim takes part in the Somalia Conference in London. The conference was aimed at improving stability and prosperity in Somalia. (AP)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Saudi Arabia