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- Mo Farah: Run away success, a man with odds stacked against him
- Urban warfare: Civilian casualties worries international community
- Somali group warns more troops will be annihilated
- Militant Alliance Adds to Somalia’s Turmoil
- European Commission allocates €35 million for victims of conflict and natural disasters in Somalia
- Somaliland: A democratic beacon of hope in a dangerous part of the world
- Somaliland: Silanyo sworn in as president
- AU to send 4,000 troops to Somalia, US against peacekeepers attacking Al-Shabaab
- Fighting in Mogadishu, at least 32 dead officials say
- Seychelles convicts 11 Somali pirates to 10 years
- Thirteen insurgents killed in Somalia's Puntland
- AU to send an extra 2000 troops to Somalia
- Puntland forces attack al-Shabab in Somali mountains
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| Contain Somalia's problems to spare Yemen |
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| News - Editorial |
| Monday, 15 February 2010 10:13 |
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Three hijackings by pirates already this year highlight the profound weakness of the international naval force tasked with patrolling the waters along the coast of lawless Somalia. Pirates kidnapped and now hold at least 100 crewpersons from just those ships—and over 300 hostages since April. The pirates’ release Thursday, after receiving a ransom, of the 30-person crew of a Taiwanese fishing boat, held for 10 months, again puts the issue into the headlines. The charged Detroit-bound failed airline bomber, Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, was allegedly trained in Yemen, an Arab country located directly across from Somalia over the Gulf of Aden, at the entrance to the Red Sea and gateway to the Indian Ocean. Yemen’s oil supply is estimated to run out in seven years, and its potable water in five. Yemen’s government is in danger of becoming a failed state, as weak as neighbor Somalia. Riad Kahwaji, founder of the Institute for Near East and Gulf Military Analysis in Dubai, told NPR that Yemen’s “position, if it becomes a failed state, will turn the piracy problem into a nightmare.” For Yemen not to become an even larger source of piracy than Somalia, it’s time to learn from and address the Somali piracy issue. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has said: "The world must come together to end the scourge of piracy." During his Nobel Peace Prize acceptance speech in Oslo on Dec. 10, President Barack Obama stressed the need to “confront” pirate attacks, but added that we must assist “failed states like Somalia, where terrorism and piracy is joined by famine and human suffering.” Source: freep.com The comment section is restricted to members only. |
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