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Dawud_uk
01-31-2009, 04:12 AM
:sl:

saw this breaking story on bbc news online, it is very interesting. as now the former islamic courts have both physical control of the country under ash shabaab and political control with the president.

i am just wondering where Sheikh Sharif Ahmed and Ash-Shabaab can work together, i suppose it depends on what compromises can be made but their backgrounds and outlooks are very different, even if their overall objectives match in principle.

:sl:

Abu Abdillah

Somali MPs choose new president

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/7860295.stm

Moderate Islamist leader Sheikh Sharif Ahmed has been elected Somalia's new president, after a secret ballot of members of parliament.

Mr Ahmed comfortably won a majority in a second round of voting after one of the frontrunners, Prime Minister Nur Hassan Hussein, withdrew.

The election followed the resignation of President Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed.

MPs met in Djibouti because of instability in Somalia, where Islamist militias control much of the country.

Mr Ahmed is due to be sworn in as president later on Saturday, before representing Somalia at an African Union summit in Addis Ababa over the weekend.

Earlier this week, 149 new opposition members from the Alliance for the Re-Liberation of Somalia (ARS), which is led by Mr Ahmed, were sworn in to parliament.

But the Islamist al-Shabab militia says it will not recognise the new government.

For the presidential election, each candidate was expected to present $2,000, a CV and official documents.

Parliament is meant to relocate from Djibouti to the Somali capital Mogadishu within days.

But Mogadishu is facing an insurgency and there are not enough AU peacekeeping troops to protect all the MPs, correspondents say.

It is thought that some will stay in Djibouti and others will relocate to Kenya.

Al-Shabab militiamen control the former seat of parliament, Baidoa, and many other parts of central and southern Somalia.

Mr Yusuf resigned as president in December. He had been accused by the prime minister and parliament of being an obstacle to peace in the country.

Somalia has not had a functioning central government since 1991, and the northern regions of Somaliland and Puntland have broken away to govern themselves.

Tens of thousands of people have been killed in successive waves of violence.

More than a million people have fled their homes.

And 43% of the population - 3.5 million - need food aid, donors say.
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Omar_Mukhtar
01-31-2009, 12:42 PM
^^bro, they made takfir on him and they are not part of ICU, who themselves have split up into various groups after the signing of the deal. I hope they can find someway to work together or at least not invitabely clash; otherwise Somali will Afghanistan after the Soviets departed.
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