Somaliland247's Blog

December 30, 2010

Russians Jailed in Somaliland for Illegal Plane Landing


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Russians Jailed in Somaliland for Illegal Plane Landing

 

mercenary plane

A court in Republic of Somaliland has sentenced six Russians each to one year in jail for illegally entering the enclave and landing a plane carrying illegal military supplies.

An attorney for the men told VOA’s Somali Service the six have the option to buy out their prison terms. They were also fined $500 for immigration violations.

The Russians were arrested earlier this month after landing their chartered plane at Somaliland’s Hargeisa International Airport. Authorities say the plane contained military uniforms and other equipment destined for the semi-autonomous region of Puntland.

Reports say the equipment was headed to a private company conducting anti-piracy training in Puntland. But authorities expressed concern the military supplies could make their way to armed groups that could destabilize Somaliland.

Source:VOA

December 29, 2010

US Government Officially invites Somaliland President

Filed under: NEWS — somaliland247 @ 4:44 pm
Tags: ,

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US Government Officially invites Somaliland President

Hargeisa (JMG)- Foreing Minister Dr. Mohamed Abdilahi Omer announced that President Ahmed Mohamed Silanyo was offially invited by the United State government. Before his departure to Addis Ababa for a 4 day follow up visit this week.

Dr. Omer Said: “The President has accepted the invitation from the US government and that the visit will be fixed at jointly agreed date.”

The minister added that he is not aware of any one else (Politician from Somalia) who is invited.

US under Secretary for African Affairs Ambassador Donald Yamamato Confirmed the invitation of President Silanyo, but did not give any specific reason.

The Ambassador said that bilateral relations, US aid to Somaliland, the new US government policy towards Somaliland and increased direct aid.

Source: The Republican

December 26, 2010

Talk of Abduction As SSC Somali Terror Boss Vanishes


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Talk of Abduction As SSC Somali Terror Boss Vanishes

 

The head of the notorious Al-Shabab-linked terror group known by its Somali acronym, SSC, has disappeared during a trip to England amid intense speculation he has been snatched by the vigilant Scotlandyard’s anti-terror cops.

Saleban Esse Ahmed, better known as Xaglotoosiye (Angle Straightener), vanished into thin air after being sent to England in an effort to collect money from SSC’s base supporters and sympathisers there to finance the terror activities of his extremist outfit, which had carried out communal massacres and several operations against the troops of the yet-to-be-recognised state of Somaliland in the eastern region of Sool from which the terror boss hails. Mr. Ahmed whose terror outfit had cultivated secret links with Al-Shabab was presiding over the group’s terror activities over the past year.

Mr. Ahmed is said to have disappeared after reportedly taking a flight from Nairobi, Kenya on 15th December. But he was no where to be found in England a week after his departure from Jomo Kenyatta international aiport in Nairobi. Friends and relatives are becoming increasingly concerned about his disappearance.

“Aside from this speculation, it is not clear whether he was detained by Kenyan police before he departed from there or whether he was bundled into a van on arrival in the UK but what is clear here though is that the man disappeared into a black hole,”said Ali Mohamed Ali, a Somalilander resident in London whose relative had been killed by the SSC.

Rumours abound that Mr. Ahmed may have gone into hiding at the advice of his closest aides for fear of being targeted by those whose relatives had been brutally mowed down with a machine gun by the SSC terrorists while performing their Eid prayers at an open field near Buhoodle in mid November.

The SSC, with covert support from Al-Shabab Islamist insurgents, killed the sector commander of the Somaliland troops in Sool region by using remotely controlled improvised explosive device (IED) planted by a roadside in Las Anod- the provincial capital of Sool.

The SSC extremists take their inspiration from Mohamed Abdullah Hassan- a religious zealot who called himself The Mahdi (the divinely guided one) but branded “Mad Mullah” by the British. He is famously known to have captured and murdered the English Colonel Richard Corfield and chanted over his dead body:

Corfield, this is your last hour in this world.

You are of those who go to Hell.

When you arrive there and meet your friends,

Tell them that all Englishmen will soon follow you.

Tell them how we smashed your head.

And if your friends in Hell ask where your teeth are,

Tell that they are lying strewn here in the sun.

And do not forget to tell them down there

That the next to come will look as you do.

The Mullah was a terror not only to foreigners, whom he considered as having no business in his country, but also to his own people as well.

Being the local franchise of Al-Shabab in this peaceful and stable part of Somaliland, the SSC ‘s objective is to destabilize and destroy the present social status quo of the three provinces of Sool, Sanaag and Cayn for which its acronym stands and replace it with a new order of its own. Residents of these Somaliland provinces strongly believe that the SSC want nothing other than to deliver these provinces to Al-Shabab.

The SSC is considered a terrorist group by Abdirahman Faraoole, the president of the self-autonomous region of Puntlad, who is related by blood to the terror boss. Equally, Somaliland regards the group as terrorists while Ethiopia smashed the groups’ base in Buhoodle in the eastern province of Somaliland last year.

A. I. Olad

Adam_olad@yahoo.com

December 25, 2010

‘Arms smugglers’ raided


 

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Commentary by Blog Admin : Illegal Weapons and Ammunition destined for Puntland is busted by South African police in a raid at Durban city, the leads might have came from ‘Somaliland intelligence service’ . Somaliland government is holding a cargo plane with six Russian crew which was taking Military equipments to Puntland in violation of the UN international arms embargo on Somalia. According to Reuters News Somaliland authorities said “there are elements arming the neighbouring semi-autonomous region of Puntland, despite a U.N. weapons embargo on Somalia and we are concerned armed groups across the border in Puntland could destabilise Somaliland.”

‘Arms smugglers’ raided

 

December 24 2010

Source: Independent Online (iol): http://www.iol.co.za/news/south-africa/kwazulu-natal/arms-smugglers-raided-1.1004844

By Nompumelelo Magwaza and Kyle Venktess

Four people, including three women, were arrested on Thursday when Durban police raided a Westville home and seized weapons and ammunition believed to be destined for Somalia(Puntland) to help in the fight against piracy, but which had been illegally diverted.

Among the weapons seized were eight 308 rifles, two shotguns and two AM3 assault rifles with telescopic lens and silencers. They were hidden in one of the rooms in the house.

The firearms were found still in their transportation cases. Police also recovered 592 rounds of ammunition and 12-bore rounds.

Police spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Vincent Mdunge said that preliminary investigations showed the firearms had been transported from Malta.

He refused to say who the weapons were destined for as this was still being investigated.

The investigation which led them to the house in Westville had been ongoing and more firearms could be found.

“We believe the firearms were illegally diverted to South Africa, but how they ended up in Durban remains a mystery,” he said.

“We believe the house was being used as a firearms holding area,” Mdunge said.

Those arrested, two 20-year-old women, a 28-year-old woman and a 39-year-old man, would appear in the Pinetown Magistrate’s Court today.

It is believed that part of the house had been converted into offices where two women were working.

Somali pirates have been involved in a spate of hijackings around the Horn of Africa, including that of a Durban couple who are still being held captive.

Bruno Pelizzari and Deborah Caitz were kidnapped along with skipper Peter Eldridge on October 26.

Ten days after their capture a Dutch naval vessel gave chase and ran their vessel ashore. The pirates fled along with the couple, leaving Eldridge behind after he refused to leave the yacht. Eldridge was duly rescued by the Dutch and brought back to Richards Bay.

On Thursday Department of Foreign Affairs spokesman Clayson Monyela said: “There is nothing new on the South African couple who were hijacked by Somali pirates.”

In another incident involving South Africans, two men from Cape Town who were falsely arrested for ownership of allegedly smuggled goods as well as for “impersonating journalists”, were released and arrived at OR Tambo International Airport on Tuesday.

Anton van der Merwe and Chris Everson, a cameraman and a sound recordist, who both work for an American documentary news show, were travelling to work on an independent production in Somalia. Their producers had told them to board a charter aircraft at Entebbe international airport in Uganda.

Piracy off the coast of Somalia has been growing rapidly, with numerous vessels being hijacked and held for huge ransoms.

A number of international organisations such as the International Maritime Organisation and the World Food Programme have expressed concern over the rise in acts of piracy, incidents of which have contributed to an increase in shipping costs and impeded delivery of food aid shipments.

A multinational coalition naval task force has been established to monitor and inspect vessels along the north-east African coastline.

Countries which are party to this task force include France, Germany, the United Kingdom and the United States. – The Mercury

December 21, 2010

Beijng to Roll Out the Red Carpet for Somaliland President


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Beijng to Roll Out the Red Carpet for Somaliland President

CNOOC is trying to win oil concessions directly from Somaliland after initially negotiating with Somalia’s central government, which has no say in Somaliland.

Somaliland president Ahmed Mohamed Silanyo is due to fly to China early in the new year in the wake of a visit to the Somaliland last April by a Chinese delegation that included two officials from the China National Offshore Oil Corp. (CNOOC).

The Chinese company wants to pick up acreage in Somaliland where Conoco identified oil and gas reserves in the 1980s. CNOOC made an initial attempt to debut in the province in 2006 by negotiating a production sharing contract covering the Mudug area in Somaliland with the Transitional Federal Government (TFG) in Mogadishu.

However, the agreement remained a dead letter because Somaliland doesn’t recognize TFG’s authority.

As a result, CNOOC switched its strategy early this year in favor of making direct contact with authorities in the province. If the company is awarded concessions it will find itself operating in both a legal minefield and an insecure environment. American companies active in the country until the late 1980s still believe themselves to be owners of their concessions and consider the acreage has simply been placed under force majeure (No. 562).

In addition, the Somaliland government has no geological data on its subsoil. The results of drilling campaigns in the 1980s have been retained since the early 2000s by a small British concern, Fugro-Robertson, which has refused to turn them over to the Somaliland government.

To make up for that lack of information, Somaliland retained TGS-Nopec in 2009 to acquire 5,300 km of seismic and magnetic data as well as 34,700 km of aeromagnetic data.

Source: http://www.africaintelligence.com

December 18, 2010

Puntland’s Tin Mineral War; South African Mercenaries; Ugandan Trainers


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Puntland’s Tin Mineral War; South African Mercenaries; Ugandan Trainers

The illegal South African Mercenary hired Plane Seized by Somaliland authorities in Egal International Airport (Hargiesa) Somaliland.

 

Tin is one of the earliest metals known and used. Because of its hardening effect on copper, tin was used in bronze implements as early as 3,500 B.C., although the pure metal was not used until about 600 B.C. About 35 countries min tin throughout the world. Nearly every continent has an important tin-mining country. Tin mineral is mainly used as a protective coating or as an alloy with other metals such as lead or zinc.

The Somaliland authorities are investigating plane loaded with military hardware for the self-styled Puntland region that made an emergency landing at Egal International Airport (Hargiesa).

This is part of Puntland’s agenda to wage war with unknown objectives; however, the investigation will enlighten such unknown agenda and objects. Puntland, self-styled region of Somalia led by Cabdiraxman Faroole, is training more than a thousand soldiers to fighting piracy – as they claim.

The first-hand reports show different stories: Puntland invited foreign companies including Australians to mine in the region that have more than 30,000 tons of tin mineral worth about 250 million American dollars. In order to achieve this, the mining area should be secure and safe, as Australians conditioned.

In recent months, Puntland started its operations to free the wealthy locations including Galgala and Mijayahan villages that have large quantity of tin mineral. The villagers of the areas, mainly Warsangali tribesmen led by Sheikh Atom, took arms against the invasion after the local wealth. The fighting broke between villagers and Puntland militia, which resulted death and displacement of hundreds of people. Australians are holding breath until Faroole clears the wealthy locations.

Faroole’s recent interest into illegal mining points out shift of business agenda from piracy and human trafficking to criminal mining. Think Tank Groups, Governments and UN accused Puntland administration for human trafficking and piracy in last decade. Thousands of poor Ethiopians, Somalis and other Africans die trying to reach Yemen and on wooden boats by the close associates of Faroole including a son.

Faroole administration blames Atom for having relation with terrorists like Al-Shabab and Al-Qaeda without concrete evidence. Also, Faroole claimed of eliminating Atom and the villagers, however, first-hand reports from Galgala say that Atom withdraw from Galgala on military tactic but not a defeat.

In order to achieve his agenda, Faroole requested weapons and training from South Africa and Uganda with help of mercenaries. He contracted Saracen International, a security company associated with Uganda’s Gen Caleb Akandwanaho, alias Salim Saleh, a senior advisor to President Yoweri Museveni, who is also his younger brother, to train Puntland militia who will protect the mineral. Saracen International is known as (Ghost of Congo) for its illegal activities in Democratic Republic of Congo.

AFP and AP reported that unnamed Arab country is sponsoring the expenses of the training militia for Puntland and military equipments from South Africa and Uganda into Somalia, which violates UN weapons embargo on former Somalia. The UN weapons embargo team is visiting Hargiesa, capital of Somaliland, to participate in the investigation of the arrested plane at Hargiesa airport.

Faroole administration is trying to mislead the world over the illegal war at Galgala by linking his opponent Sheikh Atom to religious extremism, but the bottom-line is Faroole is trying to overtake minerals and other natural resources in the area.

Former military leader in Somalia Mohamed Siyad Barre explored the minerals in the region with help of Bulgarian company; however the company stopped the operations and left Somalia for unknown reason. The Ministry of Minerals and Water of military regime invited BRGM Company from France and Arab Mining Company (AMC) from Arab League.

The exploring companies agreed on an estimation of 250 million US Dollars worth tin minerals, including the expenses, in the area, and quantity 30,000 tons of Cassiterite or Tin. The fighting between Puntland and Sheikh Atom is over the minerals in the region.

For more information read below links:

1. http://www.buzzle.com/articles/gulf-of-aden-red-sea-no-puntland-means-no-sea-piracy.html

2. http://www.buzzle.com/articles/new-puntland-president-will-lead-new-era-of-piracy.html

3. http://www.buzzle.com/articles/puntlands-lucrative-piracy-business-police-turn-pirates.html

4.http://www.americanchronicle.com/articles/view/93832

5.http://www.americanchronicle.com/articles/view/108827

Sources: USGS – definition of Tin Mineral

By Abdulaziz Al-Mutairi

Email: az.almutairi@yahoo.com

December 13, 2010

Somaliland holds plane taking illegal military supplies to Puntland in violation of the international arms embargo on Somalia


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Somaliland holds plane taking illegal military supplies to Puntland in violation of the international arms embargo on Somalia

(AFP)

MOGADISHU — The authorities of Somaliland on Friday seized a plane carrying military supplies to Puntland, a neighbouring and rival, officials said. Somaliland’s interior minister, Mohamed Abdi Gabose, told reporters in the regional capital Hargeysa that the cargo plane was in violation of the international arms embargo on Somalia. “The aircraft was originally coming from South Africa and Kampala. They asked for permission to land at our airport after experiencing a fuel shortage,” Gabose said. “But it landed before we officially gave our green light and we have seized the plane,” he said, adding that the six crew members were arrested. “This aircraft was heading to Puntland and carried military uniforms as well as other supplies for the newly recruited militiamen,” the minister said. Puntland, on whose shoreline are most of the main bases for the pirates marauding on the Gulf of Aden and Indian Ocean, has enlisted private security company Saracen International to train a dedicated anti-piracy force. The move sparked criticism from the Pentagon, which said it was concerned at the lack of transparency regarding the programme’s funding. Tensions also run high between Somaliland and Puntland. “This company that is training the militiamen is doing illegal business and violated the international arms embargo on Somalia,” Gabose said. “The military training provided to Puntland is a threat to Somaliland’s security and to that of the region in general,” he said. Airport officials said heavy security was deployed around the plane, as its cargo and manifest were being further investigated.

December 10, 2010

Somaliland President Ahmed Mohamed Mohamud Silaanyo arrived today at Hargeisa’s Egal International Airport


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Somaliland President Ahmed Mohamed Mohamud Silaanyo arrived today at Hargeisa’s Egal International Airport

 

HARGEISA -Somaliland President Ahmed Mohamed Mohamud Silaanyo arrived today at Hargeisa’s Egal International Airport after official trips to Djibouti,Ethiopia and United Kingdom.  President Ahmed Silaanyo was welcomed back at the airport by members of his government, parliament members and officials from the two opposition parties in Somaliland.

December 3, 2010

WikiLeaks:US embassy cables-Recognition of Somaliland should be considered


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WikiLeaks:US embassy cables-Recognition of Somaliland should be considered

 

 

 

The Full Document:

The Key passage about Somaliland is in Red

Friday, 06 February 2009, 16:25
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 03 LONDON 000339
NOFORN
SIPDIS
DEPART FOR AF/FO, AF/W, AF/E, AF/C, AF/S, AF/RSA, AF/SPG,
AND AF/EPS
EO 12958 DECL: 02/04/2019
TAGS PREL, EAID, MASS, KISL, ZI, SO, NI, SU, SF, XA“>XA, UK
SUBJECT: AFRICA: U.S. VERSUS UK PRIORITIES, LONDON THINK
TANKS COMMENT
REF: A. 08 LONDON 1426 B. 08 LONDON 2477 C. LONDON 289 D. LONDON 266 E. 08 LONDON 2882 F. 08 LONDON 3165 G. 08 LONDON 2917
Classified By: Political Counselor Richard Mills, reasons 1.4 (b/d).

1. (SBU/NF) Summary. During the transition to the Obama Administration, London think tanks have been active in discussing USG and HMG priorities in Africa. Poloff took the opportunity to poll opinions among Africa specialists at Chatham House, RUSI, the Royal Africa Society, Africa Confidential, the Commonwealth Policy Studies Unit, and International Crisis Group (please protect). The following are issue-by-issue consensus summaries from those discussions:

— HMG’s Africa policy lacks focus and is unable to internally prioritize its Africa policy.

— Zimbabwe should/will remain a priority for the UK for historical reasons, but the USG’s focus is “surprising,” as it is largely a contained crisis that should be treated as a regional issue. A “tough and quiet” approach should be considered.

— Somalia should be more of a priority for HMG, given the UK’s history with the region, the large number of Somali Diaspora in the UK, and the real security threats that community may present to the UK.

— Nigeria, especially the Niger Delta and corruption issues, should be a greater HMG priority because of Nigeria’s financial links to the UK, large UK-based Diaspora community, and energy potential.

— Sudan, including the Comprehensive Peace Agreement and the Darfur crisis, should remain top USG and HMG priorities because of the regional impact destabilization would have on the Horn.

— South Africa’s desire for a permanent UNSC seat should be the leverage point for the USG and HMG to actively improve relations with South Africa.

— The global economic downturn will have a greater affect on Africa than the IMF and World Bank are predicting.

— Engaging African Diaspora communities should be a key USG and HMG focus, as Africa is the most politically globalized continent.

— Engaging Muslims in Africa may be a mechanism to also improve relations with the Middle East and South Asia. End summary.

UK Africa Policy Lacks Direction, Unable to Prioritize

——————————————— ———

2. (SBU/NF) Most London-based think tank Africa specialists thought HMG had lost its ability to prioritize on Africa, especially since the October 2008 departure of Prime Minister’s Special Advisor on Africa and Development Justin Forsyth. HMG’s creation of an inter-agency Defense-Foreign Office-International Development Cabinet Sub-Committee on Africa, they thought, had not succeeded in resolving internal HMG disputes over priorities in Africa. Given the UK’s credit crunch and diminishing international influence, the Chatham House Africa specialist asserted, HMG should be trying to burden share on Africa with the French and the EU. HMG, however, has not done that effectively and is therefore spreading itself too thin, resulting in a lack of tangible impact in areas of strategic British interest.

3. (C/NF) Embassy comment: Forsyth, while hit-or-miss on follow through, was generally able to corral UK government departments into setting African priorities: Sudan, Zimbabwe, and Nigeria. FCO Minister for Africa Mark Malloch-Brown has tried to provide direction (ref A), but his “nice guy” approach of dealing directly with African leaders through his well-established network of contacts, coupled with the lack-luster direction of the new FCO Africa Director Adam

LONDON 00000339 002 OF 003

Wood (ref B), has meant no serious consideration of the UK’s priorities in Africa. The UK’s National Security Strategy also failed to provide any direction, though efforts are underway to improve the document (ref C). Brendan Cox, former Crisis Action head, is due to replace Forsyth at No. 10 in mid-February, but many of those with whom we spoke questioned if he will have the political capital to make any real impact on the UK’s Africa policy, given Prime Minister Brown’s standing in the domestic polls and need to focus on the global economic situation. End comment.

Zimbabwe

——–

4. (SBU/NF) Several think tank analysts thought that Zimbabwe should and will remain a top priority for the UK, but that HMG’s history of bombastic statements has only served to solidify President Mugabe’s status as a colonial liberation leader and rallied South Africa’s unwavering support. From a strategic perspective, these analysts termed the USG’s focus on Zimbabwe as “surprising” because Zimbabwe is not a threat, but largely a contained crisis. They said that Zimbabwe’s crisis should be treated as a regional issue, not an international one, and that the USG should not sacrifice it’s relations with South Africa, the more strategic partner, over Zimbabwe, even if the political events in Zimbabwe run contrary to the USG’s democracy agenda. They recommended the international community take a “tough and quiet” approach to Mugabe and ZANU-PF, sanctioning and obstructing their personal freedoms but without commenting publicly. They asserted that the international community’s concern about Zimbabwe being a regional destabilizer is largely unfounded, as most of the Southern Africa Development Community (SADC) – especially South Africa – “can take of themselves.”

Somalia

——-

5. (SBU/NF) Given the UK’s history, the large number of Somali Diaspora in the UK, and the real security threats that community may present to the UK, think tank security specialists thought Somalia should be more of a priority for HMG. HMG, they argued, should be more innovative on Somalia policy, focusing on local community engagement and finding humanitarian and social initiatives where material benefit can be derived without deployment of an excessively large peacekeeping force. The RUSI Africa specialist said HMG and the USG’s previous entry point to Somalia was through Ethiopia. With the withdrawal of Ethiopian troops, a new entry point should be found quickly. He thought both IGAD and the AU could serve in this capacity. He also asserted that recognition of Somaliland should be considered to allow it access to international mechanisms for development and capacity support, as well as to support its democratic development in the face of increasing Islamic militant pressures.

6. (C/NF) Embassy comment. Cabinet office officials have told us that they consider Somalia a serious security concern, but they have not been able to induce other HMG departments to move on it, in large part because of the failure of the HMG process to set Africa priorities. HMG’s budget crunch also seems to be hindering the decision-making process (ref D). End comment.

Nigeria

——-

7. (SBU/NF) Think tank West Africa specialists, citing Nigeria’s significant financial links to the UK, large Diaspora community, and energy potential, said that the country, especially the Niger Delta and corruption issues, should be a clear HMG priority, but it has not been. HMG’s capacity for political analysis on Nigeria, they thought, was both “weak and shallow.” The RUSI security specialist said Nigeria, as well as Africa as a whole, needs better maritime security and should be able to secure its ports. Weak land and maritime security, combined with fragile state and government institutions, is an integrated problem in Nigeria, he asserted.

8. (C/NF) Embassy comment: Although the Foreign Office appears interested in developing a more focused and strategic policy on Nigeria, the Home Office’s drive to conclude a

LONDON 00000339 003 OF 003

prisoner transfer agreement has prevented HMG from moving forward on any other meaningful issues (refs E, F, and G). End comment.

Sudan

—–

9. (SBU/NF) All the think tank analysts consulted agreed that Sudan, including implementation of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) and finding a political solution to the Darfur crisis, should remain top HMG and USG priorities because of the regional impact destabilization of Sudan would have on the entire Horn of Africa.

South Africa

————

10. (SBU/NF) These analysts also all agreed that now was the time for both HMG and the USG to improve relations with South Africa. It is time to mend fences, especially for the UK, and South Africa’s desire for a permanent UN Security Council seat as part of UNSC reform, should be the leverage point, they asserted. South Africa, they assessed, has the potential to break up unhelpful African voting blocks in the UN, in spite of its “diplomatically difficult” time during its recent rotation on the Security Council.

The Global Economic Downturn and Africa

—————————————

11. (SBU/NF) Royal African Society specialists thought the global economic downturn would affect Africa significantly, much more than the IMF and World Bank have been reporting, because of falling commodity prices. Increased unemployment, they thought, would likely increase urban unrest and destabilize individual nations’ security.

Engaging the Diaspora

———————

12. (SBU/NF) Several think tank specialists noted the importance of the African Diaspora. With the global credit crunch, they thought, the African Diaspora’s role will be increasingly important, both economically and politically. They asserted that Africa is the most politically globalized continent, even if it is not economically globalized. They indicated that HMG and the USG should find ways for the Diaspora to constructively engage on the continent, which will influence African governments in favor of Western values, as most large, affluent African Diaspora communities are based in the West.

Islam

—–

13. (SBU/NF) The RUSI Africa specialist suggested that HMG and the USG should do more to engage Muslims in Africa, as it is an easier entry point for fostering goodwill that may transmit to more difficult geographic areas, like the Middle East and South Asia.

Visit London’s Classified Website: http://www.intelink.sgov.gov/wiki/Portal:Unit ed_Kingdom

TUTTLE

Source: Guardian – http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/us-embassy-cables-documents/190885