NAIROBI, June 1 (Xinhua) -- Kenya on Thursday called on the international
community to continue the efforts to end conflicts in Somalia as fighting raged
in the capital between Islamists and a warlord alliance reportedly backed by
Washington.
Addressing the nation during the celebrations for the 43rd
anniversary of self-rule, President Mwai Kibaki urged governments to channel the
support to the transitional federal government of Somalia, which has embarked on
reconstruction of the war-torn nation after more than a decade of anarchy.
"Now that there is a government set up after wide consultationsamong all
clans in Somalia, any support to Somalia should be channeled through the
Transitional National Government of Somalia," Kibaki said.
As a chair of the seven-member regional group Inter-GovermentalAuthority on
Development (IGAD), which brokered the two-year reconciliation conference in
Nairobi, Kibaki said he would strive to strengthen relations between neighboring
countries to ensure lasting peace is restored to regional countries facing
political turmoil.
"As current chairman of both regional bodies, I want to see therelations
between our countries strengthened and lasting peace restored to some of our
neighbors who have experienced many years of conflict," Kibaki told Kenyans at a
national stadium.
He appealed to the international community to continue providing financial
aid to Somalia as it moves towards reinstatingother essential structures of the
government.
"I urge the international community to support the efforts of the
government of Somalia to restore peace to the country, and to consolidate
national reconciliation and reconstruction," the Kenyan leader said.
His plea came as deadly clashes resumed in the lawless Somali capital of
Mogadishu on Wednesday between fighters loyal to the city's Islamic courts and
the warlord alliance, having killed at least seven people and wounded dozens and
brought the death toll from a series of battles the two sides have fought since
February to more than 300 despite urgent appeals for peace.
The transitional government, which was set up in Kenya in 2004,has accused
Washington of funding the Alliance for the Restorationof Peace and
Counter-Terrorism (ARPCT) and contributing to instability.
The United States, which accuses the Islamists of harboring extremists,
including Al-Qaeda members, said it has been "wrongly blamed" for the fighting
but has refused to confirm or deny its backing for the alliance. Enditem