Kenya's incursion into Somalia raises the stakes

18 octubre 2011




 By Will Ross East Africa correspondent, BBC News  

Kenya has in the past trained Somali troops for deployment near the border to create a buffer zone in an effort to keep al-Shabab militants away, but the presence of Kenyan soldiers inside Somalia has always been played down or even flatly denied.

The very public announcement of this incursion into Somalia by the Kenyan army and air force is a significant change of policy, which seems at least partly aimed at sending a message to the Kenyan people and the rest of the world that the issue of security is being taken seriously.

"Our territorial integrity is threatened with serious security threats of terrorism. We cannot allow this to happen at all," Kenya's Internal Security Minister George Saitoti told the media.

"It means we are now going to pursue the enemy, who are the al-Shabab, to wherever they will be, even in their country."
Continue reading the main story
“Start Quote

    Mujahudeen fighters will force them to taste the pain of the bullets”

End Quote Al-Shabab official

The operation - unprecedented for Kenya's largely inexperienced military - appears to have been triggered by the recent kidnappings of four foreign nationals and one Kenyan.

Two of them were taken on the north Kenyan coast and the others in the Dadaab refugee camp near the border.

There is, however, no concrete proof that these kidnappings were carried out by the Islamist insurgent group.

In an area plagued by guns and Somali bandits, blaming al-Shabab could be jumping to a convenient conclusion.

Some analysts think the military operation is not about rescuing the hostages but is actually about securing the border

Going after a group linked to al-Qaeda and which is on the US terror list is an easier sell to the public than chasing bandits inside Somalia.


Excuse they need'

The verbal response from al-Shabab was swift.


"Mujahideen fighters will force them to taste the pain of the bullets," an al-Shabab official said, after the Kenyan incursion was made public.

For ordinary Kenyans there is some concern that, should the military get embroiled deeper in Somalia's complicated war, it could make Kenya more of a target for groups like al-Shabab.

The fact that Uganda fell victim to deadly bombings last year for the role it has played with the African Union force in Somalia has not gone unnoticed.

"This Kenyan action may give the al-Shabab hardliners the excuse they needed to justify a strike against Kenya," said Rashid Abdi, a Somalia analyst with the International Crisis Group.

Clearly the Kenyan government could not sit back and do nothing after the kidnappings but Kenyans hope this is a very short-term operation lasting maybe just a few days.

Somalia's government troops, some trained by Kenya, have also been battling al-Shabab near the Kenyan Somali border and they do not want to be portrayed as impotent forces in need of foreign help.

With Ugandan and Burundian soldiers propping up the Somali government in the capital, Mogadishu, it is perhaps not surprising that Somali officials have been reluctant to admit that Kenyan troops have crossed the border to fight.

Another reason for disquiet among Somali officials is that Kenya has been assisting Somali efforts to establish a semi-autonomous region known as Jubaland or Azania.

The idea is that if a secure area can be established near the border, Kenya will be safer.

"The presence of foreign troops in that area will not go down well with some elements in Somalia who will not want the Azania project to be seen as a foreign initiative," said Rashid Abdi.

The fighting will of course have an impact on Somali people trying to flee their country and seek refuge in Kenya from hunger and bullets.

Already facing terrifying journeys to make it over the border, the presence of more firepower from above and on the ground will only make those journeys harder.

Last week, 800 Somalis were reaching Dadaab every day.

Small island States sound alarm at UN over their vulnerability to climate change

12 octubre 2011




UN News Center, 24 September 2011

Representatives of small island States took to the podium at the General Assembly today to exhort the world to pay greater attention to their vulnerability to climate change, stressing that sustainable development will not be possible as rising sea levels threaten to swamp them.

From the Caribbean to the Pacific to the Atlantic, the small island countries said the world was not moving quickly enough to either mitigate the effects of climate change or support the poorest countries as they tried to adapt to them.

Prime Minister Freundel Stuart of Barbados
“The very existence of small islands States like those in the Caribbean and the Pacific could be imperilled if current trends are not reversed or altered,” the Prime Minister of Barbados, Freundel Stuart, told the Assembly’s annual general debate in New York.

“We must be cautious, therefore, about how we use fossil fuels, about carbon emission levels and about the unregulated treatment of waste. The planet has begun to protest through dramatic changes in climate change and the prospect of sea level rise,” said Mr. Stuart.

Prime Minister Tillman Thomas of Grenada
Grenada’s Prime Minister Tillman Thomas called for agreement at ongoing United Nations-led climate change negotiations on measures aimed at reducing the emissions of greenhouse gases blamed for global warming, and for the quick disbursement of funding to help small island States adapt.

Tuvalu’s Prime Minister Willy Telavi said his country will, during the Durban conference on the UN Framework Convention of Climate Change (UNFCCC) later this year, seek a mandate to begin negotiations on a new legally binding agreement for major greenhouse gas-emitting States that have not made commitments under the Kyoto Protocol, an addition to the UNFCCC that contains legally binding measures to reduce such gas emissions.

Prime Minister Ralph Gonsalves of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
Ralph Gonsalves, Prime Minister of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, said he was “baffled by the intransigence of major emitters and developed nations that refuse to shoulder the burden for arresting climate changes that are linked to the excesses of their own wasteful policies.”

The Prime Minister emphasized that time was running out for many countries as both rising sea levels and increasingly ferocious hurricanes and storms took their toll.

Prime Minister José Maria Pereira Neves of the Republic of Cape Verde
Cape Verde’s Prime Minister Jose Maria Neves, for his part, said he was counting on all UN Member States to make the transition towards the green economy and sustainable development.

“There is in Cape Verde an ongoing and ambitious programme for the national coverage in renewable energy by 50 per cent by 2020,” Dr. Neves said.

Iran, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait to meet over sea border dispute




Iran, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait to meet over sea border dispute

Agence France-Presse
Oct 12, 2011

KUWAIT CITY // A tripartite meeting between Iran, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait will be held to resolve a decades-old dispute over maritime borders, the Kuwaiti foreign minister said yesterday.

Sheikh Mohammed Al Sabah told a news conference after a meeting with his Iranian counterpart, Ali Akbar Salehi: "It's basically a technical issue but it will need a political decision from Iran, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait.

"A proposal to hold a tripartite Iranian, Saudi and Kuwaiti meeting was made and Iran has agreed in principle," Sheikh Mohammed said, without announcing a date for the meeting.

The Kuwaiti minister said his meeting with Mr Salehi focused almost entirely on the maritime border issue known as the continental shelf "which is a thorn in the Iranian-Kuwaiti ties".

The two nations have been in talks for several years over demarcating the sea border, which is also shared by Saudi Arabia, without any progress.

The dispute over the shelf, which includes the Dorra gasfield, dates back to the 1960s.

Recoverable gas reserves from Dorra are estimated at some 200 billion cubic metres.

Iranian also has maritime disputes in the Gulf with the UAE. Iran has occupied the islands of Abu Musa and the Greater and Lesser Tunbs, which the Emirates regards as its territory.

(Fuente)

Invaden Belice cárteles mexicanos: The Washington Post




México está por encima de nosotros, y Guatemala y Belice forman parte del embudo que los narcotraficantes tiene que pasar para llegar a México.

Proceso 12 de octubre de 2011

MÉXICO, D.F. (apro).- El diario estadunidense The Washington Post reveló hoy que los cárteles mexicanos han convertido a Belice en la principal puerta de entrada de la droga proveniente de Colombia y Venezuela.

En una nota difundida en su edición de este miércoles, el rotativo dice que de esa manera los narcos evitan ser detectados por elementos del Ejército y la Marina.

Según el periódico, “funcionarios de Estados Unidos no creen que los cárteles de la droga hayan establecido una significativa presencia física en territorio beliceño, sin embargo, Douglas Singh, el policía de más alto rango en Belice, dice que recientemente fueron detectados en ese país empresarios mexicanos que “se cree están trabajando para los cárteles del Golfo y de Sinaloa”.

De acuerdo con el oficial, “México está por encima de nosotros, y Guatemala y Belice forman parte del embudo que tiene que pasar para llegar a México”, apunta el diario en su edición de este miércoles.