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SLUG: 2-298580 CQ Somalia Talks (L-O)
DATE:
NOTE NUMBER:

DATE=1/20/03

TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT

TITLE=CQ SOMALIA TALKS (L-O)

NUMBER=2-298580

BYLINE=KATY SALMON

DATELINE=NAIROBI

CONTENT=

VOICED AT:

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INTRO: Somalia's neighbors are hoping that the appointment of a new mediator will bring momentum to the Somali peace talks. Katy Salmon reports from Nairobi.

TEXT: The appointment of former ambassador Bethwell Kiplagat as Kenya's special envoy to the Somali peace and reconciliation talks comes at a crucial stage of the negotiations.

The previous mediator, Elijah Mwangale, was not popular among delegates at the peace talks in the Kenyan town of Eldoret. In a letter to Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki, they accused the mediator of being a dictator and demanded his removal.

Speaking just before his dismissal, Mr. Mwangale blamed his difficulties on disagreements among the more than 20 Somali leaders at the talks.

/// MWANGALE ACT ///

There are inherent weaknesses in the whole process based on the assumption that there would be easy acceptance of each other in terms of the leadership that is in Eldoret. So, whatever I do and I believe whatever any other chairman does after I leave, if I do, they will face the same problems.

/// END ACT ///

Analysts say it will clearly take more than the appointment of a new mediator to salvage the talks. During the past two weeks, several warlords have walked out, complaining that too little progress was being made.

The three-month-old talks have become bogged down in disagreements over participation. Some 900 Somali delegates turned up when just 300 were expected.

This has put the Kenyan government, which is paying the delegates bills, under an enormous financial strain. The hotels in Eldoret are threatening to evict the delegates if the government does not settle its accounts.

Kenyan Foreign Minister Kalonzo Musyoka has pleaded with the hotels to give the government more time to find the money.

/// MUSYOKA ACT ///

This minister wishes to urge the hotels not to throw out those delegates. In the spirit of being Kenyans I want to urge them to persevere for the time being.

/// END ACT ///

Somalia has had no central government since 1991 when President Mohammed Siad Barre was ousted. This is the fourteenth time that peace talks have been convened to try to restore order to the Horn of Africa country, which is ruled by rival warlords.

The new mediator, Mr. Kiplagat, a former Kenyan Ambassador to Britain and France, and Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, is widely respected as a regional peacemaker. He has been deeply involved in the Sudanese peace process and heads the Africa Peace Forum, a regional body working towards ending the many conflicts in the Horn of Africa. (SIGNED)

NEB/KS/AWP/RAE



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