UN renews AMISOM Somalia mission
November 8, 2012The council extended the AMISOM peacekeeping mission for four months, instead of the usual 12, to allow for a review of operations, including consideration of the request to lift the arms embargo and a call for permission to resume the export of stocks of charcoal.
Some 17,600 UN-mandated peacekeepers are helping the government to fight Islamist rebels in Somalia. Ugandan troops make up more than a third of those peacekeepers, but they have threatened to withdraw in protest over accusations made in a leaked UN report about the backing of M23 rebels in the Democratic Republic of Congo
Analysts say the withdrawal of Ugandan troops from Somalia would be disastrous because of the security threat posed by the al-Shabab militants and their links to the al-Qaeda. There's a possibility of the country falling back into complete anarchy after recent gains in the battle against the insurgents .
Emmanuel Kisiangani is an expert on Somalia politics at the African Institute of Security Studies in Nairobi. He told DW's Africalink radio show that participation in the AMISOM mission earns the Ugandan government foreign currency. It is also an economic factor for the Ugandan troops themselves as well as the for the government. It is a big operation.
“They (Uganda) contribute about a third of the AMISOM forces and they are the main actors particularly in Mogadishu, Kisiangani said. "They are the majority in Mogadishu so if you take them out, the challenges in Mogadishu are much more than in Kismayu.
The arms embargo
The African Union has appealed to the 15-member UN Security Council to review the two-decade arms embargo to help Somalia rebuild its army and consolidate military gains against the al Qaeda-linked al Shabaab militants. The Security Council is divided over this issue.
The Security Council imposed the embargo in 1992 to cut the flow of arms to feuding warlords, who ousted dictator Mohamed Siad Barre and plunged Somalia into civil conflict a year later.
However, diplomats at the UN believe Somalia will become more stable in future. "The situation in Somalia is changing rapidly. We have a more legitimate political leadership than ever before," British U.N. Ambassador Mark Lyall Grant told the Security Council.
He acknowledged the African Union request for the arms embargo to be lifted, but gave no indication of how Britain would respond.
Somalia wants help to strengthen its poorly equipped and often ill-disciplined military, which is more of a loosely affiliated umbrella group of rival militias than a cohesive fighting force loyal to a single president.