Sign in to follow this  
Sophist

PRESS STATEMENT BY KENYA'S SPECIAL ENVOY AND CHAIRMAN OF THE IGAD TECHNICAL COMMIITTE

Recommended Posts

Sophist   

Welcome to Hiiraan Online, Today is Saturday, August 2, 2003

 

© CRD

Kenya's Special Envoy Mr Bethuel A Kiplagat.

 

Issued in Nairobi 1st AUGUST 2003

 

Ladies and gentlemen of the Media, first I would like to thank all of you for coming to this Press Conference. I would also like to commend you for your sustained coverage of the Somali peace process, which is a good indicator of how you rightly view and evaluate the seriousness of the matters at hand.

 

Similarly, I would like to convey my thanks to members of the IGAD Technical Committee and our international partners in the Somali National Peace and Reconciliation process for making themselves available. They are here in order to speak on any relevant and pertinent issues that may be better addressed by them as representatives of international organizations and governments who have played a critical role over the past nine months in seeking peace and reconciliation for Somalia.

 

The IGAD frontline states - which were mandated to seek a solution for Somalia and the international community - have exhibited total support to the process. Indeed, the level of commitment by the international community in the provision of diplomatic and political support; and the provision of resources to fund the Conference is highly commendable. I believe that all these well-wishers of Somalia will continue to support the process until the objectives set out early last year by the IGAD Heads of State Summit in Khartoum, and endorsed by the international community - are realised.

 

Aim of briefing: We are on course...

The aim of this press briefing is to inform you about progress and gains so far made by the Conference and to highlight key stages of the process before we embark on the formation here in Kenya of a transitional, broad-based, all-inclusive, government.

 

We are confident in our efforts that the government formed here will obtain prompt international acceptance and diplomatic recognition.

 

Where are we now?

We are almost at the end of the most critical phase of the conference - that is Phase II. I say this with some trepidation though with equal justification. In this lap, five working reports for the future government have been completed and adopted. These reports deal with the key issues which must be dealt with by the future government.

 

They are: Demobilization, disarmament and reintegration; land and property rights; economic reconstruction, institution-building and resource mobilization; regional and international relations; and conflict resolution and reconciliation. Their completion and adoption is a major milestone by itself. These reports provide for the future government, almost instantly, with useful and handy tools to deal with the main and immediate tasks ahead. A huge amount of time, talent and financial resources were expended to delineate the plans and to formulate the programmes.

 

I am glad to report that there is general agreement among the Somali delegates and other informed partners that the recommendations, which were approved by plenary sessions, represent a concrete and sensible approach to the tasks which were initially identified in Phase One and the priority areas.

 

The Charter

The sixth report- which actually was considered by Committee One is the Charter. I must report that it was and is the most contentious. It has caused some delay in respect of the Conference timetable. In a process of reconciliation, where it is essential to take on board opposing views, more time for reflection and reconsideration was needed. I am glad to report that we have distributed today the Final Draft Version of the Charter which will be submitted formally to the delegates tomorrow - Saturday.

 

I believe you need a bit of background to this. The Charter committee came up with two versions. The IGAD Technical Committee in turn submitted the two versions to the Somali leaders committee for reconsideration with a view to obtaining a harmonized compromise version. After numerous meetings and consultations, the sticky points were identified and resolved.

This provided for the historic breakthrough of the 5th July 2003, where all the Charter disagreements were ironed out. It was resolved that the selection of the members of parliament would be done by the political leaders - signatories to the Declaration of Cessation of Hostilities signed in Eldoret on 27th October 2002 - and politicians who were originally and officially invited by the IGAD Technical Committee in consultation with traditional leaders. I am glad to say that all invited leaders are here. There are two who have not arrived and they are on there way here. Similarly, 73 Ugases (traditional leaders) have arrived. I must emphasize here that all the stakeholders fully participated in all the deliberations. In fact, it was after all the concerns were addressed that agreement was reached. Now the stage is set for the Plenary to discuss and debate the Draft Charter.

Some misunderstanding

In the public domain, there are some incorrect reports which I suppose arise from oversight or misreading or lack of information on the Draft Charter. These need to be corrected. It has been broached that the issue of religion is not addressed. The Draft Charter in Chapter Two Article 10 proclaims: "1. Islam shall be the religion of Somalia. 2. The Islamic Sharia shall be the basic source for national legislation."

 

A unified Somali State

In a similar vein, there are suggestions that the Draft Charter is encouraging dismemberment of Somalia. Such an act is obviously in contravention of the UN Charter and repeated pronouncements of the Security Council; it is also the stance of the AU and the Arab League. In fact, the matter of a unified Somalia is proclaimed in the mandate given by IGAD Summit to the Technical Committee.

This is what the Draft Charter says on this issue in Chapter One Article 2.0: "1. The unity, territorial integrity, political independence and sovereignty of the Republic of Somalia shall be independent, sacred, inviolable and indivisible.

"2. The territorial sovereignty shall extend to the land, the islands, territorial sea, the sub-soil, the airspace above and the continental shelf.

"3. Boundaries: The Republic of Somalia shall have the following boundaries.

a. North - Gulf of Aden; b. Northwest - Republic of Djibouti; c.West - Federal Republic of Ethiopia; d. South-Southwest - Republic of Kenya; e. East - Indian Ocean." That is what the Draft Charter says. As you can see the boundaries are not only specified but are also defined.

 

The primacy of the Somali language

The language issue has also been embellished beyond belief. Suggestions abound that the Arabic language has been relegated or even worse in some reports - has been dropped totally. Here are the facts. The Draft Charter proclaims in Chapter Two Article 9: "The official languages of the Republic of Somalia shall be the Somali language (Maay and Maxaatiri) and Arabic. 2 The second official language of the Transitional Federal Government of Somalia shall be English."

 

Let me reiterate here, that the Conference is about the Republic of Somalia and not a section of it. And that is what my colleagues and myself are mandated to fulfill. Efforts have been made in the past to ensure that all parts of the country is fully represented in the conference. And as I speak, we have not relented or given up on seeking the participation of all parts, groups or representation of all shades of opinion. The parliament formed will be made up of all clans. On the issue of Ugases (Sultan, traditional leaders), 73 are already here in the Conference.

The security issue is of paramount importance for Somalia and a major concern for her neighbours and the international community. The country cannot be allowed to continue to bleed. On this front, a committee - with the full support of the AU and the UN - is working tirelessly on security matters.

Finally, ladies and gentlemen we are all looking forward to the formation of a transitional Somali government very soon which, with the help of the international community, will have the capacity to seize the enormous opportunities and goodwill under offer; and will wrench the country from the present state of despair and devastation. Ultimately the Somali people will determine their destiny through free and fair polls after the expiry of the interim dispensation which will be formed here.

I hope as we enter the third phase - which will principally be about power-sharing - we shall have more press conferences of this kind so that we share in the joy of breaking good tidings to Somalis, Africans and the World.

 

Now I invite any questions from you. Thank you.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Restore formatting

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Sign in to follow this