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Somalia opposition conference delayed

August 31, 2007 (ASMARA) — A conference of Somali opposition figures due to start in Eritrea this weekend as a rival to government-sponsored peace talks in Mogadishu has been delayed, diplomats said on Friday.

Several Islamist leaders, some former Somali parliamentarians and an ex-deputy prime minister were among those due to attend the talks scheduled to start on Saturday.

The conference was intended to unite diverse groups who oppose Somalia’s interim government and vehemently object to the presence of its Ethiopian military backers on Somali soil.

But various delegates had not arrived in Eritrea, and the agenda was still not properly prepared, diplomats said.

“I think they need a few more days to work out exactly how they’re going to handle this conference,” said one Western diplomat who tracks Somalia closely. “The main rallying flag is going to be ‘get the Ethiopian troops out’, that’s for sure.”

Some opposition figures, including Islamist leader Sheikh Sharif Ahmed, have taken exile in Eritrea, whose government is sympathetic to their cause and has bitter enmity with Ethiopia.

News of the delay came a day after a six-week national reconciliation conference, backed by the government and the international community, closed in Somalia.

That conference, which some had seen has the best hope for peace in the Horn of Africa nation, closed with a raft of resolutions but little impact on the insurgency raging in Mogadishu. Islamists, and some other opposition figures, had boycotted the Mogadishu talks.

Mark Schroeder, Africa analyst with U.S.-based intelligence consultancy Stratfor, said when it did happen, the Eritrea conference was likely to be “even less constructive” than the Mogadishu one, and could inflame regional tensions.

“Participants such as Sheikh Sharif Ahmed will be expected to criticise the Ethiopian intervention in Somalia, very likely demanding Addis Ababa to withdraw its forces from that country or face renewed war,” he told Reuters.

“The Ethiopian government under Prime Minister Meles Zenawi will perceive the statements and demands made by the Somali exiles … participating in the Asmara conference as clear national security threats.”

And Ethiopia will “not take kindly” to such statements coming from the soil of its regional foe, Eritrea, he added.

Islamist-led fighters have been targeting the Somali government and its Ethiopian military allies since the New Year, when a brief, six-month Islamist rule of Mogadishu was ended.

Somalia has been plagued with violence since warlords overthrew dictator Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991.

President Abdullahi Yusuf used Thursday’s talks’ closure ceremony to appeal to insurgents to lay down their weapons.

“I wish them to prepare for elections and seek the support of the people through the ballot.”

Under the transitional charter that brought his government into being in 2005, Somalia should hold elections in 2009.

(Reuters)

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