The Citizen (KZN)

SA diplomat fends off Somali envoy

HAYSOM CITES CIVILIAN ABUSE

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Unfazed after being declared persona non grata in Somalia, South Africa’s top United Nations (UN) diplomat Nicholas Haysom, the special envoy to the Horn of Africa country, has warned that continuing political turbulence could throw the country off course.

Haysom, who is also the head of the UN Assistant Mission in Somalia (Unsom), made the warning during a meeting of the UN Security Council (UNSC) in New York on Thursday, UN News reported.

Somalia’s ambassador to the UN, Abukar Dahir Osman, later challenged the South African diplomat saying that his country distinguis­hed between the institutio­ns that Somalia was part of and the conduct of individual­s who had a detrimenta­l effect on the fragile nation.

Unsom’s head was ordered to leave Somalia on Tuesday after he raised concerns about abuses carried out against Somali civilians by the country’s security forces and wrote a letter to the Somali government asking it to explain the legal basis for arresting Mukhtar Robow, the former alShabaab deputy leader who was the main challenger in the South West State elections for regional presidency.

Mogadishu responded by accusing Haysom of violating internatio­nal diplomatic norms by interferin­g in the state’s national sovereignt­y and ordered him to leave the country.

Addressing the UNSC, Haysom, while commending Somalia’s efforts to tackle corruption and build a lasting peace through political reform and transforma­tion, said that everybody involved in the peace process needed to “pull in the same direction”. Turning to Somalia’s complex Roadmap on Inclusive Politics reform process, he warned that a “key milestone” had been missed in not meeting the December deadline for a draft new electoral law.

Haysom said the meaningful participat­ion of women was essential as were other draft national agreements on justice, mineral resource-sharing, “allocation of powers and fiscal federalism”. Overshadow­ing progress there however, he said, was a continuing stalemate between the leaders of central government and Somalia’s Member States, which “continues to impede progress in defining the federal model, building institutio­ns of state, and in the implementa­tion of the National Security Architectu­re”.

Osman responded saying the UN and its representa­tives had “an obligation ... to not interfere in our internal affairs.” He added: “While we strive to re-establish the rule of law and end a culture of impunity, we reject the criticism and attempt to rebrand the new terrorism as an ice-cream salesperso­n without redeeming themselves.” – ANA

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