SOMALIA INTERIM GOVERNMENT BOYCOTTS TALKS
By MOHAMED OLAD HASSAN, Associated Press Writer Fri Jul 14, 4:21 PM ET
MOGADISHU, Somalia - Somalia's
nearly powerless government said Friday it would boycott peace talks with an Islamic militia that has seized control of most
of the country's south, noting the group wanted to topple the leadership and had massacred civilians.
The boycott was the latest
setback in a swiftly deteriorating relationship between the internationally recognized government and the radical militia,
which the United States accuses of harboring
al-Qaida and wanting to impose a Taliban-style theocracy.
"The Islamic group has extreme
views which cannot go with the world's civilized and democratic system," government minister Ismail Mohamud Hurreh told The
Associated Press on the eve of Saturday's talks in Khartoum, Sudan, under the auspices of the Arab League.
Abdallah Mubarak, the Arab
League's special envoy to Somalia, said peace talks would take place at
a date to be determined, but that Sudan's
president would talk with the Islamic leaders Saturday.
The Supreme Islamic Courts
Council sent negotiators to Khartoum despite the boycott by the government, which was formed with the help of the United Nations but wields no real power outside its base in Baidoa, 150 miles
northwest of Mogadishu.
"If the transitional government
doesn't come, then the international community will see who wants peace in Somalia
and who doesn't," said Sheik Sharif Sheik Ahmed, a top Islamic official.
The Islamic militia wrested
Mogadishu from a secular alliance of warlords last month,
bringing weeks of relative calm to a capital that has seen little more than chaos since the last effective central government
was overthrown in 1991.
But the group soon showed
a more radical side, establishing strict courts based on the Quran and replacing a moderate who had been its main leader with
Sheik Hassan Dahir Aweys, whom the U.S. has linked to Osama bin
Laden's terrorist organization. Aweys denies the allegations.
The group also quashed resistance
in Mogadishu, culminating in two days of fighting this week
that killed 70 people and wounded more than 100, many of them civilians. The opposing fighters were loyal to a warlord who
had refused to disarm.
"The militia massacred civilians
and government supporters during their latest fighting in Mogadishu,"
President Abdullahi Yusuf said. He added that the militia wants to capture "the whole country, region by region," including
the government seat of Baidoa.
On Thursday, the U.N. Security Council said it is willing to consider easing an arms embargo
so the transitional government can develop a security force. The government says the Islamic militia boosts its ranks with
foreign Arab soldiers.
"While the Islamic militants
have their own foreign fighters, I think we have a right to have forces from our own foreign friends to help us restore peace
and stability and the implementation of the national institutions," Yusuf said.
Somalia has been without an effective government since warlords overthrew its longtime dictator in 1991 and divided
the nation into fiefdoms. The Islamic fundamentalists stepped into the vacuum as an alternative military and political power.
U.S. officials had cooperated with the warlords, hoping to capture
three al-Qaida leaders allegedly protected by the Islamic council who are accused in the deadly 1998 bombings at the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.