African Union authorises troops for Somalia


Tue February 8, 2005 2:47 PM GMT+02:00

By Tsegaye Tadesse

ADDIS ABABA (Reuters) - The African Union has authorised five east African nations to deploy troops and equipment to help Somalia's fledgling government return safely to its anarchic nation.

Somalia's government was formed at peace talks in the safety of Kenya last year to end the lawless rule of local militias which banded together to depose military dictator Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991.

The five nations agreed at an African Union summit in Nigeria last week to send troops or equipment to ensure security when the government returns.

In a communique issued on Tuesday, the pan-African body's Peace and Security Council laid out the responsibilities of a peace mission backed by contingents from Kenya, Djibouti, Ethiopia, Sudan and Uganda.

The soldiers and other personnel are to be employed under the rubric of the Intergovernmental Authority for Development (IGAD), a group of east African governments that managed peace negotiations for Somalia and southern Sudan.

The AU-backed peace support mission is "to provide security support to the transitional federal government, in order to ensure its relocation to Somalia".

It will also "guarantee the sustenance of the outcome of the IGAD peace process and assist with the re-establishment of peace and security, including the training of the police and army", the communique said.

Two groups of government officials returned to Somalia last week, greeted by cheering Somalis, while on a mission to assess security.

Somali President Abdullahi Yusuf has said he wanted a combined AU-Arab League force of 7,500 troops to facilitate the government's return. But others in his administration have argued that the militias are all the military muscle required.

Somalis are traditionally resistant of outside interference. The last peacekeeping mission in Somalia ended in a bloody and humiliating withdrawal by U.S. and United Nations troops in the mid 1990s.

The communique did not specify the deployment size, although Uganda has already pledged 2,000 troops. Discussions on the size and mandate of the force were underway this week.

Kenyan Foreign Minister Chirau Ali Makwere told a press conference that Kenya wished to maintain its mediator's neutrality and therefore would only send logistics and observer personnel, not soldiers.

It was unclear from what government branch the Kenyan contingent would be drawn.

Published: Source: reuters.co.za

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