Warlord calls for landmine ban
2002-11-01 20:07
Kenya - Somali faction leader Hussein Mohamed Aidid on Friday urged rival warlords in Somalia to agree to a total ban on the use of landmines.
"I urge the Somali factions, which signed a peace deal at
the weekend, to end the decade-old civil war in Somalia, to end the use of landmines to prove that they are against all kinds of
violence," Aidid said in an interview on Friday.
"I am making a humane appeal for an end to the use of landmines, as women and children are prime victims," Aidid said, pointing out: "It has brought terrible human losses to nomads in the war-affected areas."
Aidid denied allegations by other warlords that he is among
leaders of Somalia's warring factions that have received landmine
consignments from neighbouring Ethiopia in the past several years.
"I swear it is not a bluff, my faction never used and will not
not use landmines in future, as they have killed or maimed many
Somalis and left scary memories in their minds that will not go
away," Aidid said.
Landmine victims need expensive and specialised medical
treatment, which is unaffordable in Somalia, Aidid said.
"A poor child whose limbs are blown off by a landmine can't have plastic surgery," Aidid said.
"If a child's smiling face is destroyed once by a landmine, it
would be difficult to give back his or her natural beauty and
strength."
He said the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC)
gives little help to landmine victims in Somalia.
Aidid, a US citizen and a former corporal in the US marines
reserves, is chairperson of the United Somali Congress/Somali National Alliance (USC/SNA) faction.
He is also co-president of the Somali Reconciliation and
Restoration Council (SRRC), a grouping of Somali warlords
established in Ethiopia in 2001 and opposed to the Somali
Transitional National Government (TNG).
Aidid said tens of thousands of people have died because of
landmines since 1977, when Ethiopia and Somalia went to war over
Ethiopia's southeastern Ogaden region.
"It is a pity that some factions use landmines in their fiefdoms at main entrance gates and in most highways to force commuters to use roads controlled by their fighters," Aidid said, without naming any faction.
However, the remark was probably a reference to the Rahanwein
Resistance Army (RRA) and TNG fighters, who plant landmines on the edges of their territory to enable them to collect hefty taxes in the southern Wanlaweyn district of Lower Shabelle region.
Somalia has not had a fully functional government and has been
ruled by clan warlords since dictator Mohamed Siad Barre was
overthrown in January 1991.
Weapons of all kinds, including landmines, can be purchased
freely at Mogadishu's weapons' markets, such as Bakara, while
thousands more are imported into the country by the major clan and sub-clan warlords.
Aid agencies have removed landmines from parts of Somalia,
mainly in the breakaway Republic of Somaliland, which seceded from the rest of Somalia five months after Barre was ousted. - Sapa-AFP
- SAPA