www.xinhuanet.com
XINHUA online
CHINA VIEW
VIEW CHINA
 Breaking News Urgent: 7 US soldiers killed in Iraq by roadside bombs    URGENT: Ukraine Supreme Court rejects appeal by Yanukovych    URGENT: Special meeting on tsunami relief efforts begins in Jakarta     Kuwait charges soldiers for planning attacks against US forces    Urgent: Ukrainian president dismisses government    Urgent: Global tsunami aid pledges rise to nearly 4 billion dollars: UN    
Home  
China  
World  
Business  
Technology  
Opinion  
Culture/Edu  
Sports  
Entertainment  
Life/Health  
Travel  
Weather  
  About China
  Map
  History
  Constitution
  CPC & Other Parties
  State Organs
  Local Leadership
  White Papers
  Statistics
  Major Projects
  English Websites
  BizChina
- Conferences & Exhibitions
- Investment
- Bidding
- Enterprises
- Policy update
- Technological & Economic Development Zones
Source Manufacturers and Suppliers from China and around the world
   News Photos Voice People BizChina Feature About us   
Somali premier retains former warlords in cabinet
www.chinaview.cn 2005-01-07 20:23:10

    NAIROBI, Jan. 7 (Xinhuanet) -- Somali Prime Minister Ali Mohammed Ghedi retained former warlords in his 91-member cabinet announced here Friday, completing Somalia's first government in almost 14 years.

    Ghedi named a new cabinet of 42 ministers, 42 assistants and 7 ministers of state without portfolio, 89 of whom are men and three women drawn from Somalia's different clans.

    The new cabinet is composed of members of the previous transitional national government, warlords and those not tainted.

    Ghedi, who himself was reappointed three weeks after parliament voted him out, said he had named a government of reconciliation which he urged to work as a team to implement its agenda in Somalia.

    Somalia has been without an effective government since 1991 when the regime of Muhammad Siad Barre was toppled, following which the country plunged into anarchy and factional violence.

    Since the breakdown of the Somali central government, conflict and famine have killed hundreds of thousands of people.

    Under the auspices of the Inter-Governmental Authority on Development, which groups Djibouti, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Kenya, Sudan, Uganda and Somalia, Somali National Reconciliation Conference began in October 2002 in the western Kenyan town of Eldoret, and was moved to Nairobi in February 2003.

    As a result of the conference, Somali Transitional President Abdullahi Yusuf was inaugurated on October 14, 2004 in Nairobi. Enditem 

  Related Story
Copyright ©2003 Xinhua News Agency. All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.