Komen AAL:

Berita ini (secara tidak sengaja) langsung menghilangkan apajua keraguan 
mengenai sifat sebenar regim "pemerintah" Somalia kini. Nyata ia sememangnya 
anti-Islam, sehinggakan begitu membenci dan mencurigai masjid dan menganggap 
sesiapa sahaja yang berkait dengan masjid sebagai musuhnya.

Inilah "kerajaan" yang disokong dan didokong oleh kuasa-kuasa Barat, 
terutamanya Amerika, melalui proksi mereka Ethiopia. Jelasnya regim tersebut 
bukannya mahu menjaga kepentingan Somalia atau mentadbir negara tersebut 
sebaiknya, tetapi hanya berguna untuk menyekat pengaruh para Mu'minin yang 
mahukan Islam dan Syari'ah tertegak. Kalau dahulunya di bawah pemerintah Majlis 
Mahkamah Syari'ah, negara lebih aman dan jenayah dilenyapkan, kini keadaan 
adalah sebaliknya, dengan keadaan berkocar-kacir dan penjenayah berleluasa.

Yang nyata, Soimalia bukanlah satu-satunya negara Islam yang diceroboh 
sedemikian. Hampir keseluruhan bumi ummah ini dikuasai oleh mereka yang 
bersifat sebegitu... yang mencapai kuasa hanya kerana mereka bersedia 
dilacurkan untuk mengkhianati agama, bangsa dan tanahair mereka sendiri.


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Somali government troops storm UN compound and kidnap official

Xan Rice in Nairobi
Wednesday October 17, 2007
Guardian Unlimited 

Somali government troops have stormed a UN compound in Mogadishu and arrested 
the World Food Programme chief in protest at a decision to distribute food 
relief through a network of mosques.

About 60 soldiers forced their way into the WFP offices yesterday morning, 
taking Idris Osman, a Somali national, into custody at gunpoint and locking him 
in a cell at the national security services headquarters. No reason was given 
for the arrest, which promoted an immediate suspension of WFP work in the 
war-torn capital.

But UN officials said it was linked to a new method of food distribution that 
began on Monday using 42 local mosques to get aid to more than 75,000 people in 
the city. The WFP, which is struggling to deal with a growing hunger crisis in 
Somalia, had been unable to directly distribute food in the capital since June 
25 due to violence and looting. "Going through the mosques guaranteed us a 
level of security that the government cannot give," said a UN official in 
Nairobi, who requested anonymity. 

Though Somalia is almost completely Muslim, the transitional government views 
mosques, particularly in Mogadishu, with suspicion. The Somali Council of 
Islamic Courts, which took over the capital last year before being defeated by 
invading Ethiopian forces, used clerics to help draw in supporters fed up with 
more than a decade of anarchy in the country. Remnants of the Islamists' 
militant wing are behind a growing insurgency in the capital, with roadside 
bombs, mortar attacks and gunfights claiming several innocent lives every day. 

The authorities draw little distinction between civilians and the insurgents 
that live among them, so humanitarian assistance is often a source of tension. 
Mohamed Dheere, the mayor of Mogadishu and a close government ally, recently 
accused aid agencies of feeding terrorists by giving food aid to internally 
displaced people in camps near the capital. 

In a statement, the WFP said the plan to use mosques as distribution points had 
been cleared with the regional governor and said the government's action 
"violates international law". Attempts by the UN to secure Mr Osman's release 
had proved unsuccessful by last night. 

The suspension of aid will be keenly felt in Mogadishu. The insurgency - and 
counter-insurgency operations by government and Ethiopian troops - has wrecked 
the already fragile economy. Drought and then floods have hit the Shabelle 
region, usually the country's breadbasket. Hyperinflation has set in.

Countrywide, the UN estimates that 1.5 million people need food relief, with 
300,000 of them only one step away from famine conditions. Somalia's government 
has accused the international community for not doing enough to help, but aid 
workers say that President Abdullahi Yusuf has done little to help the 
situation. 

Insecurity is so rife that few aid agencies maintain offices in Somalia. The UN 
only employs Somalis to work in Mogadishu, as expatriates are considered too 
much of a target. Merely getting food into the country is a huge - and 
expensive - challenge. Piracy, which was almost completely eliminated during 
the Islamic Courts' six-month reign last year, is again rampant, making 
delivery of food aid by sea highly risky. UN officials believe that members of 
the government are the protecting the pirates, who demand ransoms of up to $1m 
(£500m) a ship. 

Clan militias and bandits regularly attack aid convoys travelling by road, 
despite government promises to secure the main aid routes. Physical 
distribution of food may be the most dangerous leg of all, with the UN 
reporting an increasing number of fatalities in recent months. Government 
forces, who are poorly and irregularly paid, are often involved in the looting. 

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