Somalia Arms Embargo Suspended 1 Year, Journalist Jailed For Rape Victim
Talk
By Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED NATIONS, March 6, 2013 -- After the UN Security Council voted
Wednesday to suspend parts of its Somalia arms embargo for a year, Inner
City Press asked UK Ambassador Mark Lyall Grant about criticism from Amnesty
International and, in the Council's open meeting, from Guatemala.
(Inner City Press put the resolution online, here
<
http://innercitypress.com/unsc1somalia030613.pdf> .)
Lyall Grant first said that the attempt was to bridge the difference
between these critics and those who wanted to do away with the arms embargo
altogether.
He gave examples of safeguards, ranging from Somalia giving "advance
notice" of arms purchases to reporting twice a year on the restructuring of
its security forces. He cited the Somali government as requesting the end of
the arms embargo.
Inner City Press asked about Somalia jailing journalist Abdiaziz Abdinuur
for interviewing the victim of a rape by the Somali security forces. Lyall
Grant replied that the UK had condemned this, but he saw no connection to
the resolution. He said there are many challenges to be addressed in Somalia
-- apparently including the jailing of journalists for doing their job --
but overall, the government has restored sovereignty.
In a quote that the Somalia Permanent Representative told Inner City Press
he particularly liked, Lyall Grant said the resolution is a step away from
the "international trusteeship" of Somalia. "Let's hope they follow up on
that," Somalia's PR told Inner City Press. But what about journalist
Abdiaziz Abdinuur? Watch this site.
Footnote: after the session, Inner City Press asked Lyall Grant about the
Kenyan naval component of AMISOM. He said that much of it had been
reembursed, but that now the Somalia government does not want a naval
component. Ah, African Union...
Received on Wed Mar 06 2013 - 21:05:26 EST