World Video | Defence | Foreign Affairs | Natural Events | Trade | NZ in World News | NZ National News Video | NZ Regional News | Search

 


Somali Government Asked To Do More For Citizens

UN Political Chief Encourages Somali Government To Do More For Its Citizens

New York, Sep 2 2010 1:10PM

The United Nations political chief has voiced his solidarity with the people of Somalia during a one-day visit to the Horn of Africa nation, and encouraged its leaders to focus on governing the country.

“It is crucial to show the long suffering people of Somalia that the Government can deliver basic services,” B. Lynn Pascoe, the Under-Secretary-General for Political Affairs, stated while in the capital, Mogadishu, on Wednesday.

He said the international community is very interested in supporting the Transitional Federal Government (TFG), “but the Government itself needs to do more and learn to work as a cohesive team.”

Mr. Pascoe, who was accompanied by the UN special envoy for Somalia, Augustine Mahiga, met President Sheikh Sharif and Somali Cabinet ministers at the presidential compound.

Prior to arriving in Mogadishu, the Under-Secretary-General travelled to Kenya, Djibouti, Eritrea and Ethiopia for discussions on peace and security issues in the Horn of Africa, including the situation in Somalia, which has been afflicted by ongoing violence and faces one of the worst humanitarian crises in the world.

Violence in Mogadishu alone has led to some 3,000 conflict-related casualties so far this year and uprooted around 200,000 people from the city, which has been the scene of ongoing clashes between Government troops and Islamist militant groups, including Al-Shabaab.

Just last week an attack on a hotel in Mogadishu killed at least 30 civilians, including members of Parliament, and drew widespread condemnation from the UN and others.

On a return visit today to the Kenyan capital, Nairobi, Mr. Pascoe told reporters that the TFG was reaching out more to political opponents, and that greater international awareness of the needs on the ground was translating into more comprehensive assistance on security and other matters.

“Is this is a huge challenge? Yes, is it going to be very difficult. But what strikes me is how pieces are coming into place and the political will of the international community is strengthening... I am hopeful that things are beginning to move in the right direction.”

While in the Somali capital, Mr. Pascoe also praised the work of African Union forces deployed in the country since 2008 and commended the UN for providing them with logistic support.

At the same time, he called for more troops as well as financial and logistical support for the force, known as AMISOM, which lost four of its peacekeepers earlier this week in an attack against the presidential palace.

ENDS

 
 
 
 
 
World Headlines

 


U.S. Politics: STOCK Act Passes House - 'Political Intelligence' Omission

The U.S. House of Representatives passed its version of the STOCK Act today, which omits disclosure requirements for "political intelligence" workers that were included in the version of the bill passed by the Senate last week ( S 2038). More>>

Exhibition - West Papuan Women of Resistance: Dear Friends Of Art And West Papua

You are invited to what is perhaps a unique exhibition featuring women of West Papua in their living response to the suppression of human rights and freedom under Indonesian occupation and military brutality over the past fifty years. More>>

U.S. Politics: David Swanson: The Election We Should Be Following

For progressives and populists around the country who take an interest in Congressional races there are always a few good challengers we might hope to send to Washington. Incumbents, we assume, can take care of themselves. But in Northern Ohio, redistricting ... More>>

Greenpeace: Industry Figures Confirm GM Food Is European Commercial Flop

Annual industry figures to be released on Tuesday are expected to confirm the commercial failure of genetically modified (GM) food in Europe, said Greenpeace. Only around 0.06% of the EU’s agricultural land was used in 2011 to grow GM food, the report ... More>>

Asia: IFJ Press Freedom In China Campaign Bulletin

1. China’s New Clampdown: Press Freedom in China 2011 2. Senior Newspaper Staff Sacked for Reporting Inflation Concerns in China 3. Journalist Attacked in Taiwan 4. Dissident Writer Yu Jie Flees to the United States 5. Writer Li Tei Sentenced ... More>>


Women’s Rights: 2,000 African Communities Abandon Female Genital Mutilation

New York, Feb 6 2012 1:10PM A new United Nations report shows that almost 2,000 communities across Africa abandoned female genital mutilation/cutting (FGM/C) last year, prompting calls for a renewed global push to end this harmful practice once and for all. More>>

Connie Lawn: Newt Gingrich Wins In South Carolina

Former House speaker Newt Gingrich gives his victory speech in Columbia after winning the South Carolina primary with 40% of the vote. Runner-up Mitt Romney pledges to fight for Republican nomination in 'long race', while third-placed Rick Santorum says of Gingrich: 'He kicked butt. I'm proud of him.' Ron Paul finished fourth ... More >>

ALSO:

Pacific.Scoop: Real Change In Burma No Longer A Pipe Dream – But Don’t Jump The Gun

For a long time, it was easy for us to hold an opinion on Burma. It fitted neatly into the classic dichotomy of good and evil. The regime – made up of cruel, despotic military generals – was bad, and Aung San Suu Kyi and the huddled masses of Burmese people she led were good. More >>

Burma: After Political Prisoner Amnesty, Ethnic Warfare Is Rekindled In North

Even as the Burmese government initiates political reforms in much of the country, it has intensified an ethnic civil war in the resource-rich hills of northern Myanmar, a conflict that at once threatens its warming trend with the United States... More >>

 
 
 
 
World
Search Scoop  
 
 
powered by newsagent
NZ independent news