Citing Spike In Somalia’s Arms Trade, Security Council Extends Group Tracking Flows
New York, Nov 29 2006 9:00PM
The United Nations Security Council today <"http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs//2006/sc8880.doc.htm">condemned the spike in Somalia’s weapons trade and extended the mandate of a group of experts monitoring the flow of arms for an
additional six months.
Acting under Chapter VII of the UN Charter, which allows for the use of force, the Council unanimously adopted a
resolution stressing that States must comply with the arms embargo against Somalia.
It condemned “the significant increase in the flow of weapons and ammunition supplies to and through Somalia” and said
it would “consider specific action to improve implementation of and compliance with measures” which were imposed in
1992, a year after President Muhammad Siad Barre’s regime was toppled. The country has had no functioning national
government since then and has been wracked by factional fighting.
The Union of Islamic Courts, which controls the capital Mogadishu, and the Transitional Federal Parliament, which is
based in Baidoa, are scheduled to hold peace talks in mid-December, Secretary-General Kofi Annan’s Special
Representative for Somalia François Lonsény Fall told the Council earlier this month.
Describing the current situation in Somalia in its latest report to the Council, the monitoring group says, “The contest
is overwhelmingly military in nature, with rampant arms flows to both sides. The arms flows are a premier part of a
deliberate, ongoing and broader military build-up taking place on both sides.”
To stem this deadly trade, the group makes a number of recommendations for tightening the embargo, including a total
border surveillance and interdiction effort involving a combination of sea, air and land military forces as well as a
financial-assets freeze on all Somali-owned and -operated businesses located inside and outside Somalia that are
connected to either side.
The group also calls for a “concerted and immediate international political and diplomatic initiative” aimed at
underscoring “the very real possibility of an extended war and military conflict in the Horn of Africa” while working
towards disengagement. It also urges “encouraging the involvement of all essential Somali actors in meaningful political
dialogue leading towards a political solution to the Somali situation.
ends