NAIROBI (Reuters) - Talks between Somalia's interim government and
the opposition in Djibouti are a waste of time and no tangible outcome
can be expected, Islamist leader Sheikh Hassan Dahir Aweys said on
Thursday.
Speaking from Asmara, where he lives in exile, the former army
colonel urged his allies from the Alliance for the Re-liberation of
Somalia (ARS) attending the peace talks to walk out.
"I don't expect anything tangible to come out of the meeting,"
Aweys, 62, told Reuters. "What two or three people have agreed upon in
a short sitting cannot be of good to the public ... It's just a waste
of time."
Negotiations started at the weekend over Somalia's conflict pitting
government troops and their Ethiopian military allies against Islamist
insurgents, remnants of an ousted sharia courts group led by Aweys.
Asked whether his hardline stance might cause a rift in the ARS,
Aweys said it would actually strengthen the group and help them foster
a united approach towards ending the conflict.
"I wish to tell my brothers from the alliance they should come back
so that we can first agree together ... The meeting was hastily planned
and the main thorny issues are not addressed," he said.
Aweys said dialogue could succeed only if Somalia was freed from
"Ethiopian occupation" and its people were able to enjoy freedom and
justice.
"SIMPLE SOLUTION"
"The solution is simple. Our enemy Ethiopia should be removed. We
have a responsibility to first throw them out then we can organise a
national conference after attaining freedom," the
cleric-turned-politician said.
Most Somalis resent the presence of soldiers from Ethiopia,
Somalia's ancient rival. The government sought Ethiopia's help to
recapture the capital Mogadishu in 2006.
Aweys was one of those behind Somalia's Islamic Courts Council
which defeated U.S.-backed warlords in mid-2006, seizing Mogadishu and
much of the south before allied Somali-Ethiopian troops ousted them six
months later.
Despite gaining some popularity for restoring law and order, the
Islamists fell out of popular favour for imposing strict Sharia law,
whipping drunkards in public and closing down cinemas and beauty
parlours viewed as anti-Islamic.
Aweys urged the world to treat the Somalis, deprived of effective
central rule since the 1991 ouster of a dictator, fairly. He indicated
change was possible with the U.S. president to be elected this year to
replace George W. Bush.
"We would love America to be led by a man who would reduce the
current problems in the world, who would ease the suffering of many
oppressed people like us," he said.
Source:Reuters