Region | Somalia
UN peacekeepers 'must take over' in Somalia
The international community must deploy UN peacekeepers in Somalia without delay or risk worsening insecurity in the Horn of Africa, the country's Prime Minister warned on Monday.
Addis Ababa: The international community must deploy UN peacekeepers in Somalia without delay or risk worsening insecurity in the Horn of Africa, the country's Prime Minister warned on Monday during a visit to Ethiopia.
Prime Minister Nour Hassan Hussain said the UN troops were needed to replace Ethiopian forces under the terms of a peace deal reached last month at UN-led talks in Djibouti.
"The UN and international community must provide financial support and deploy peacekeepers without delay so that Ethiopian forces would withdraw in accordance with the agreement."
Hussain was speaking at a news conference in the capital Addis Ababa following a three-day trip to Ethiopia.
The June 9 deal agreed in Djibouti between his interim government and some opposition figures called for the rapid deployment of a robust UN stabilisation force for Somalia.
The deal said that Ethiopian forces should leave Somali soil within 120 days, but that their withdrawal was conditional on "sufficient" UN troops being deployed before that.
Insurgents inside Somalia and opposition hardliners have criticised the deal, which has had little impact on the ground.
Late on Sunday, unknown gunmen in Mogadishu assassinated the Somali head of the United Nations Development Programme.
In a statement issued in Kenya, the UN resident and humanitarian coordinator for Somalia, Mark Bowden, condemned the murder of Osman Ali Ahmad.
"If this is indeed another example of a targeted killing of UN and non-UN humanitarian and development workers in Somalia, it is particularly outrageous and worrying at this critical time, when the need for humanitarian assistance is rapidly increasing," Bowden said.
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