


http://www.gouv-exil.org/




Le
Général de Division (à titre temporaire)
M ALI ABDILLAHI
IFTIN
Commandant
le Mouvement Djiboutien
de Libération Nationale


President
Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed
02/12/04
- SOMALIA - The interim prime minister
of Somalia, Ali Muhammad Gedi, on Wednesday named a partial-government of 27 ministers
who immediately took oath of office at a ceremony attended by President Abdullahi
Yusuf Ahmed in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi.
Gedi's
director of communications, Hussein Jabiri, told IRIN that the full government
would consist of 31 ministers, 31 vice-ministers and five state ministers. The
rest of the cabinet along with the vice-ministers, he said, would be named "within
a few days".
"After
long consultations with the various Somali parties, the prime minister has come
up with a broad-based, all-inclusive cabinet," Jabiri said. All Somali factions,
he added, were represented in the new cabinet, with some faction leaders being
given important ministry positions.
Missing
from the list were prominent faction leaders Hussein Aydid and Muhammad Qanayre.
The
post of minister of commerce went to the Mogadishu-based faction leader Muse Sudi
Yalahow, while another Mogadishu-based faction leader, Usman Hassan Atto, will
be the new minister of public works. Kismayo-based faction leader Barre Hirale
becomes the minister for reconstruction.
Baidoa-based
faction leaders, Hassan Muhammad Nur Shatigadud and Adan Madobe, become agriculture
and justice ministers, respectively, Jabiri told IRIN. Abdullahi Shaykh Isma'il,
another faction leader, will be both the new deputy prime minister and foreign
affairs minister.
Female
Somali leaders, however, decried the lack of gender balance in the new cabinet,
which has only one full woman minister, Fawzia Muhammad Shayka, for gender affairs.
Asha
Abdalla, an MP, told IRIN that the appointment of one woman would be "an
injustice against Somali women".
"There
should have been at least four women ministers," she added. "This is
a continuation of the marginalisation of women."
Asha
Haji another MP told IRIN: "It is unfortunate that women are once again marginalised.
We have been denied our quota in the parliament and again in the cabinet."
The
Somali interim constitution stipulates that 12 percent of the members of parliament
should be women. However, they only account for eight percent of the current 275
parliamentarians.
"I
have personally campaigned that women should been given posts as women and not
as part of clans," she added. "Every time the clans have been asked
to submit names, there are never a woman among them".
Meanwhile,
regional analysts questioned the size of the new cabinet and whether Somalia can
afford it. "We know that it is a real challenge to balance the demand for
inclusivity with that of practicality and function, but it is very hard to imagine
what 31 ministers will do in Somalia at this stage," Matt Bryden, of the
International Crisis Group, told IRIN.
"This
suggests that the new leadership is guided by form, rather than function,"
he added. "This government is [financially penniless] and if it can not trim
its expectations to reflect its actual means, then I am afraid it will fail."
Yusuf
was elected to head Somalia on 10 October by members of the transitional federal
parliament sitting in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi. He named Gedi as interim prime
minister, an appointment that marked the culmination of a two-year reconciliation
conference sponsored by the Inter-Governmental Authority on Development that brought
together representatives from various clans and factions.
Somalia
had ceased to function as a modern state in 1991 when armed groups overthrew the
regime of Siyad Barre, precipitating a ruinous civil war that saw numerous warring
warlords and their militias carve the country into fiefdoms.
Source:
IRINnews.org
