7/10/2005
UN Group Reports Jump In Violations Of Arms Embargo Against Somalia
Reporting a sharp rise in violations of the arms embargo against
Somalia, a UN monitoring group is recommending that the Security
Council tighten the noose to cut funding available to former warlords
in the war-ravaged country.
In a report released this week the four-member expert group points
to a “severely elevated threat of widespread violence in
central and southern Somalia” and calls for an “integrated
embargo” to cover the export of charcoal and fish originating
in the Horn of Africa country and a ban on foreign vessels fishing
in Somali waters.
“
The proposal is not intended to seriously affect or impose restrictions
on individuals in Somali civil society who are engaged in traditional,
domestic and day-to-day subsistence activities for the purpose
of local consumption,” the report says.
The increase in the violations is a manifestation of the highly
aggravated political tensions between the Transitional Federal
Government (TFG) and its opponents, fuelled by external support
for different factions, the report says.
Arms are flowing from Yemen to the Somali Government, according
to the report. The arms cargo of a dhow was seized by the Yemeni
Government, but the Group notes that round-trip flights to Somalia
by Yemeni military aircraft took place in July.
The Group says the Government of Ethiopia had sent arms shipments
directly to TFG militia forces in Western Somalia – a charge
which the authorities in Addis Ababa have denied.
“
Another State in the region,” which the Group declines to
identify because the investigation is incomplete, has provided
arms to the Somali opposition forces, countering Ethiopia’s
assistance to the Government, and has also sent weapons to the
rebel Oromo National Liberation Front (ONLF) of Ethiopia.