Somalia crisis deepens as president withdraws PM’s powers

MOGADISHU— Somalia’s President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed has suspended Prime Minister Mohammed Hussein Roble’s power to hire and fire officials, the latest development in a destabilizing feud that has plunged the country into a fresh crisis.

The dispute between the two leaders marks an escalation of months of tension, threatening to throw an already fragile electoral process into deeper peril.

“The prime minister has violated the transitional constitution so his executive powers are withdrawn … especially his powers to remove and to appoint officials, until the election is completed,” the office of the president, popularly known as Farmaajo, said in a statement.

It added the suspension will last until the conclusion of elections later this year.

There was no immediate comment from Roble.

Farmaajo’s four-year mandate expired in February but was extended by parliament in April, triggering deadly gun battles in the capital Mogadishu, with some rivals viewing it as a flagrant power grab.

Roble cobbled together a new timetable for polls, but the process fell behind. Last week, he accused Farmaajo of trying to reclaim “election and security responsibilities” from him.

Elections in Somalia follow a complex indirect model, whereby state legislatures and clan delegates pick lawmakers for the national parliament, who, in turn, choose the president.

The next phase is scheduled for between Oct 1 and Nov 25.

The feud intensified last week when Roble sacked Somalia’s intelligence chief for his handling of a high-profile probe into the disappearance of a young agent.

Farmaajo overruled the prime minister, appointing the dumped intelligence official as his national security adviser.

Roble, in turn, accused the president of “obstructing” the investigation and fired the security minister and replaced him with a Farmaajo critic.

The spat has raised the political temperature in the capital, Mogadishu, with a coalition of opposition presidential candidates on Friday saying it “supports the prime minister and condemns the actions of the outgoing president”.

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

ECOWAS slaps Guinea junta with travel, financial assets sanctions

ACCRA (Ghana)— The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) imposed sanctions, including a freeze in financial assets and travel bans, on the military junta in Guinea.

The bloc has also given the military rulers a six-month ultimatum to return the country to constitutional order, Jean-Claude Kassie Brou, ECOWAS President, told the media after the regional grouping’s extraordinary Summit, in Accra, to firm up a decision on the political impasse in Guinea.

Eight leaders, including the Presidents of Togo, Cote d’Ivoire, Senegal, Burkina Faso, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Guinea Bissau and Niger, took part in the meeting.

Nigeria was being represented by its Vice President Yemi Osinbajo. Three other foreign ministers and a prime minister represented their countries.

The Summit, opened by ECOWAS chairman Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, discussed the outcome of the high-level mission that the Bloc sent to Guinea last week after the virtual emergency meeting of the region’s leaders on Sept 8, following the ouster of President Alpha Conde by an elite unit of that country’s military on Sept 5.

The Bloc at that meeting suspended Guinea’s membership, and asked the military junta to return the country to constitutional order, and to unconditionally release President Conde and all those held.

The High-Level mission, led by Ghana’s Foreign Minister Shirley Ayorkor Botchwey, last Friday went to Guinea, met the military rulers led by Lieutenant Colonel Mamady Doumbouya, and saw President Conde at his detention place.

But the military leaders, after consultations with the ECOWAS mission, outlined a number of conditions before handing over to civilian rule.

Soldiers, led by a former French Legionnaire, Lt. Col. Doumbouya, announced on Sept 5 that they had seized power and arrested 83-year-old President Conde, and suspended the Constitution of the West African nation.

They appeared on national television, with some draped in the red, gold and green flag of Guinea, to announce that the Government had been dissolved because of rampant corruption.

The military junta who called themselves the National Rally and Development Committee, closed all land and air borders for a week.

President Conde is still being held by the coup makers. Some other persons who were arrested in the process have been released.

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Biden threatens more sanctions on Ethiopia, Eritrea over Tigray conflict

President Biden on Friday will sign an executive order empowering the Treasury and State departments to sanction Ethiopian and Eritrean government officials engaged in the military conflict in Ethiopia, in a bid to pressure warring parties in the Tigray region to move toward a cease-fire.

“This action provides the Department of Treasury working in coordination with the Department of State the necessary authority to impose sanctions against those in the Ethiopian government, the Eritrean government, the Tigray People’s Liberation Front, and the Amhara regional government if they continue to pursue military conflict over meaningful negotiations to the detriment of the Ethiopian people,” a senior administration told reporters on a call previewing the announcement.

The latest action comes amid reports of egregious human rights violations occurring in the region. Human Rights Watch issued a report this week accusing Eritrean government forces and Tigrayan militias of killing and raping Eritrean refugees in the Tigray region.

In signing the executive order, Biden is not sanctioning any person or entity immediately. Biden administration officials hope that the threat of sanctions will cause the parties to change course and seek a political solution to the destabilizing conflict.

“Unless the parties take concrete steps to resolve the crisis, the administration is prepared to take aggressive action under this new executive order to impose targeted sanctions against a wide range of individuals or entities,” the senior administration official added.

Biden in a statement Friday said he is “appalled by the reports of mass murder, rape, and other sexual violence to terrorize civilian populations.”

“The ongoing conflict in northern Ethiopia is a tragedy causing immense human suffering and threatens the unity of the Ethiopian state,” Biden said. “The United States is determined to push for a peaceful resolution of this conflict, and we will provide full support to those leading mediation efforts, including the African Union High Representative for the Horn of Africa Olusegun Obasanjo. We fully agree with United Nations and African Union leaders: there is no military solution to this crisis.”

Ethiopian federal government forces and the Tigray People’s Liberation Front have been battling since last November in Tigray, a region in the north of Ethiopia that borders Eritrea. The fighting has killed thousands of people — opposition groups estimated the death toll at 52,000 earlier this year — and caused a dire humanitarian crisis.

More than 5 million people in Ethiopia need humanitarian assistance and 900,000 are living in famine conditions in the Tigray region alone, officials said. Less than 10 percent of humanitarian supplies have reached the Tigray region and the rest have been obstructed.

The fighting has persisted despite calls from the international community for a ceasefire.

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres demanded an immediate cease-fire and unrestricted access to aid in Tigray last month, calling on the parties to recognize that there is “no military solution” to the situation.

The new sanctions regime is the latest example of the Biden administration’s tougher stance against Ethiopia over the war, though it’s unclear whether the threat of sanctions will be enough to lower the temperature.

The Biden administration in May announced visa restrictions on current and former Ethiopian and Eritrean officials as, Amhara forces and members of the Tigray People’s Liberation Front. The U.S also restricted economic and security assistance to Ethiopia. In August, the U.S. sanctioned the chief of staff of Eritrea’s defense forces over human rights abuses under the Global Magnitsky Act.

Biden administration officials signaled that the administration would move to issue sanctions under Biden’s new order if the warring parties do not take concrete action toward negotiating a cease-fire or bolstering humanitarian access.

Such steps could include accepting the African Union-led negotiation efforts or designating a negotiation team, the senior administration official said, or authorizing daily convoys of trucks carrying humanitarian supplies or restoring basic services like electricity in Tigray.

Officials insisted that the new measures are not directed toward the people of Ethiopia or Eritrea. The Treasury Department is also issuing general licenses on Friday to provide exemptions for the flow of development and humanitarian assistance, including food, medicine, coronavirus-related assistance and medical devices, the official said.

“We provide Ethiopia with more humanitarian and development assistance than does any other country — benefitting all of its regions,” Biden said Friday. “We will continue to work with our partners to address basic needs of at-risk populations in Ethiopia and the greater Horn of Africa.”

Source: Dehai Eritrea Online

Egypt’s el-Sisi backs December elections in Libya

CAIRO— Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi has pledged support for elections in Libya in talks with the North African country’s interim prime minister Abdul Hamid Dbeibah.

Sisi “stressed the importance of the upcoming Libyan elections in respecting and activating the free will of the … Libyan people,” a presidency statement said.

An interim government was established earlier this year to lead conflict-ridden Libya towards Dec 24 parliamentary and presidential polls.

During a visit to Tripoli on Tuesday, US Department of State Counsellor Derek Chollet said the war-torn country had “the best opportunity in a decade to bring the conflict to closure”.

Parliament speaker Aguila Saleh, who also met el-Sisi alongside Libya’s east-based commander Khalifa Hiftar, ratified a law last week governing the presidential elections.

Critics accused him of failing to follow due process and seeking to favor Haftar, who is increasingly expected to run in the country’s presidential poll later this year. Cairo has long been seen as one of Haftar’s main supporters.

Egypt’s war-scarred neighbor is trying to extricate itself from a decade of turmoil following the 2011 toppling of longtime leader Muammar Gaddafi in a NATO-backed uprising.

In recent years, the country has been split between rival administrations backed by foreign powers including Turkey and the United Arab Emirates.

In his meeting with Dbeibah, el-Sisi rejected all forms of “foreign interference” in Libya, the statement added.

According to the UN, some 20,000 mercenaries and foreign fighters were still in Libya last year.

The Russian Wagner Group has also been accused of supporting Haftar by sending guns-for-hire to destabilize the country. Turkey has backed the Tripoli-based Government of National Accord.

Haftar’s forces were routed from the country’s west last year, and the two camps signed a ceasefire deal in Geneva in October.

During Dbeibah’s visit to Cairo, Egypt and Libya’s unity government signed a series of cooperation agreements and several infrastructure contracts.

The 14 memorandums of understanding, cover sectors ranging from industry and hydrocarbons to agriculture, communications, and civil aviation, according to a statement from Egypt’s Cabinet.

Project contracts signed between the Libyan government and prominent Egyptian companies include a ring road around the Libyan capital Tripoli, another road leading south to Jalu from the eastern town of Ajdabiya, and the construction and supply of two gas plants.

No detail was given on the value of the contracts.

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Tunisian president orders to open borders with Libya

TUNIS— Tunisia and Libya are to reopen their shared border on Friday, the presidency in Tunis said, two months after they were closed as the country’s coronavirus caseload soared.

“The president of (Tunisia) issued orders to reopen border crossings with the state of Libya from Friday” at 7:00 am local time (0600 GMT), the office of President Kais Saied said in a statement.

Libya closed its land borders and suspended flights between the two countries on July 8 due to an explosion in Covid-19 cases in Tunisia, which responded by closing its own crossings.

But with the caseload rapidly dropping, officials on both sides agreed to reopen the frontier, with measures in place to limit the possibility of contaminations.

Tunis and Tripoli agreed on a health protocol “subject to revision in light of developments in the health situation in the two countries,” the Tunisian statement read.

The reopening would be reviewed in case of any “violation”, it added.

Tunisia’s Covid-19 caseload, which in August was the world’s worst according to official data, has since significantly improved.

On Tuesday the country of 11.7 million recorded 1,142 new cases and nine coronavirus-caused deaths.

Reopening the border was a key point of discussions between Saied and Libyan transitional Prime Minister Abdulhamid Dbeibah, who visited Tunis last Thursday.

The Ras Al-Jdeir and Dahabiya crossings are key economic lifelines for Tunisian traders in the country’s economically marginalised south, while many Libyans cross to access medical treatment and visit Tunisia for tourism.

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Egypt, Bahrain Leaders Discuss Ethiopia’s Nile Dam Issue

CAIRO– Egyptian President, Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi, met yesterday with Bahraini King, Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa, in the Red Sea resort city of Sharm el-Sheikh, where they discussed the latest developments of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD), built on the Nile River, said the Egyptian presidency.

During the talks, the Bahraini king renewed his country’s solidarity and support for Egypt and Sudan, regarding the GERD issue, said Egyptian presidential spokesman, Bassam Rady.

The Bahraini king also reiterated Manama’s support for everything that preserves Egypt’s and Sudan’s legitimate rights and water security in the Nile River, “as well as, support for efforts to reach a binding, just and comprehensive agreement on filling and operating the GERD,” according to the statement.

For his part, Sisi urged for intensifying meetings between senior officials of both Egypt and Bahrain, to coordinate closely on the successive developments taking place in the Middle East region, and strengthen Arab unity in facing various regional challenges.

The Egyptian president also expressed Egypt’s keenness to continue boosting bilateral cooperation with Bahrain, hailing “historical ties” between the two Arab countries.

The meeting came, a day after the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) issued a presidential statement, urging resumption of tripartite negotiations among Ethiopia, Egypt and Sudan, with a view to finalising the text of a mutually acceptable agreement on filling and operating the dam “within a reasonable time frame.”

It also encouraged observers invited to the African Union-led negotiations – and any other observers that Egypt, Ethiopia and Sudan may consensually decide to jointly invite – to continue to support the discussions, with a view to facilitating the resolution of outstanding technical and legal issues.

The UNSC presidential statement has been welcomed by both downstream countries, Egypt and Sudan, which have repeatedly been calling for a tripartite binding legal agreement, on the rules of filling and operating the dam.

Decade-long negotiations failed to reach an agreement over the issue, including those hosted earlier by Washington and recently by the AU.

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Washington to review export policies for Ethiopia, Eritrea, and Cyprus

The US Department of State is preparing to add Ethiopia and Eritrea to its list of countries with a policy of denial for the transfer of military equipment under Section 126.1 of the International Traffic in Arms Regulation (ITAR), while extending its waiver for Cyprus, Janes has learnt.

The updated policy toward Ethiopia and Eritrea came as a result of the recent conflict in the Tigray region in northern Ethiopia.

US Department of State spokesperson Ned Price said in a 10 September statement that the US “remains gravely concerned by ongoing conflict in multiple regions of Ethiopia. Reports of continued human rights abuses and atrocities by the Ethiopian National Defence Forces, the Eritrean Defence Forces, Amhara regional and irregular forces, the TPLF and other armed groups, including the reported attack on civilians in one village in Amhara region this week, are deeply disturbing. We condemn all such abuses against civilians in the strongest possible terms and call on all parties to the conflict to respect human rights and comply with their obligations under international humanitarian law.”

Eritrea has already been under a presumption of denial with exceptions for UN Security Council approved humanitarian or protective use, or for personal protective equipment for use by media, humanitarian aid, and development workers. The addition of Ethiopia to the list would, however, represent a new policy shift for the US towards the African country.

Source: Dehai Eritrea Online