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A
file photo of a Somali bodyguard sitting at the back of a vehicle
with a machine gun
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By
Ali Halni, IOL Correspondent
MOGADISHU,
June 3 (IslamOnline.net) – The African Union's Peace and Security
Council (PSC) is expected to engage in consultations with a cohort of
Somali generals and senior police officers on how best to disarm
Somali militias in case the pan-continental body decides to interfere
militarily in the troubled country.
A
Somalia
military source, speaking on condition of anonymity, told
IslamOnline.net Thursday, June 3, that the PSC contacted several
top Somali brass, who were never involved in the civil war, to outline
a plan to disarm the warring militias once Kenya-hosted peace talks
are crowned with the formation of a Somali government.
He
said a preliminary meeting will be held next week in the Ugandan
capital
Kampala
to name the generals and policemen who will assist in this program.
He
asserted that a plenary official meeting will be held later this month
in the Ethiopian capital
Addis Ababa
.
According
to the source, an African military delegation is due to visit a number
of Somali regions for consultations with the local governors.
Former
senior military commanders have been living in different parts of
Somalia
country since ousting the central government in January 1991.
Most
of them have engaged in public life except for low and medium-ranking
officers who joined tribal militias and have been involved in the
civil war.
However,
the Somali police have remained independent, with a large number of
senior officers living in police barracks.
The
U.N. had resorted to former senior military and police leaders in a
similar program in the early 1990s, before the U.S.-led military
intervention.
The
program never saw the light due to the bloody confrontations between
the
U.S.
troops and the Somali militias in October 1993, which prompted the
withdrawal of the American forces followed by other international
troops.
The
idea of African military intervention currently appeals to most of the
Somali people to put an end to the chaos and armed conflicts
overshadowing
Somalia
for about 13 years.
The
African Union launched the PSC on Tuesday, May 25, in the hope it will
become a robust guarantor of stability in
Africa
.
The
15-member body is empowered to mandate peacekeeping missions in
conflict areas where ceasefire accords have been signed and to
recommend to the assembly of AU heads of state that troops be deployed
uninvited in cases of genocide, war crimes and crimes against
humanity.