
Friday, December 21, 2007
The UN says ferocious fighting between joint Ethiopia-Somali forces and insurgents in the capital Mogadishu, which has displaced at 600,000 people, has spurred Africa's worst humanitarian crisis.
"At the moment some UN agencies appear to be doing damage in respect of parroting totally unfounded reports by some agencies without in any way trying to verify the facts," Meles said.
"The situation there, as hard as it is, it could do with less hype and exaggeration," he added.
Meles, whose troops at the beginning of the year helped oust an Islamist government from the country's southern and central region where it had ruled for six months, rejected accusations that his forces were deliberately firing at civilians.
"There has not been any indiscriminate firing on our side because it would be completely suicidal for us to engage in such an activity," Meles said.
"Our intention is to give space to recreate the Somali state - you do not create the Somali state by firing indiscriminately into civilian areas and civilian targets," he added. "Nevertheless, it's quite true that when you fight in build-up areas, there are bound to be civilian casualties and these are extremely regrettable."
The Ethiopian Army has in the past accused Islamist-led insurgents of targeting civilians, notably in the capital's volatile Bakara market area.
The UN agencies say around 1.5 million people are in need of emergency humanitarian supplies across the divided and war-shattered African nation home to about 10 million people.
Aid groups have said the lack of security is choking their efforts to deliver supplies.
The African Union (AU) has only deployed 1,600 troops from Uganda of the 8,000 it planned to send to bolster President Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmad's feeble government as well as secure humanitarian operations.
"I understand why the African Union does not have the resources to fulfill its promise. But I hope that those who have the resources will support the African Union so they can deploy the peacekeeping troops," he said.
Asked if the Ethiopian forces would withdraw if there were half the number the AU peacekeepers, Meles said: "That would go along way in making an appropriate environment for us to withdraw."
On Wednesday, the UN Security Council renewed its call for the world body to pursue contingency planning for deploying a peacekeeping force in the country, and expressed "grave concern" at the humanitarian situation in Somalia.
Source: AFP, Dec 21, 2007