Remarks With Somali Transitional Federal Government President Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Nairobi, Kenya
August 6, 2009
SECRETARY CLINTON:
President Sheikh Sharif and I have just concluded a very thorough and
productive discussion – thank you – about the challenges facing his
country and the efforts of the international community to support the
Transitional Federal Government as it stands up for the people of
Somalia and against the threat of violent extremism.
The United
States pledges our continued support for President Sheikh Sharif’s
government. And we have joined IGAD-the Intergovernmental Authority on
Development, the Arab League, the Organization of the Islamic
Conference, and the African Union, in endorsing the Somali-led Djibouti
peace process.
Can we turn the lights on? Is that all right? (Laughter.) We keep turning them off. Thank you, that helps. Thank you.
I
want to reiterate our support for that process today. I conveyed to
President Sheikh Sharif very strong support that President Obama and I
have both for the peace process and for his government. We believe that
his government is the best hope we’ve had in quite some time for a
return to stability and the possibility of progress in Somalia. A
strengthened Transitional Federal Government would have positive
consequences not just for Somalia, but for the region and the wider
global community. It would contribute to greater regional stability and
start to alleviate the growing refugee crisis afflicting Somalia’s
neighbors, especially Kenya, which is hosting nearly 300,000 Somali
refugees today.
President Sheikh Sharif’s government has taken up
the fight on behalf of the Somali people against al-Shabaab, a terrorist
group with links to al-Qaida and other foreign militant networks.
Al-Shabaab and its allies lack regard for human rights, for women’s
rights, for education, and healthcare, and the progress of the Somali
people. They see Somalia as a future haven for global terrorism. Just
this week in Australia, we have been reminded that there are those who
would use Somalia as a training ground for attacks around the world.
No
one knows better than the president the challenges facing Somalia and
his people. Millions of Somalis – roughly 40 percent of the population –
are in need of humanitarian aid as they confront persistent conflict,
prolonged drought, and periodic disease outbreaks. And the TFG’s
institutions, including the security sector, need not only reform but
significant financial support, so that the government can make real
progress in delivering services for the Somali people. The United States
and the international community must serve as an active partner in
helping the TFG and the people of Somalia confront and ultimately move
beyond the conflict and poverty that have gripped their country.
The
African Union Mission in Somalia is playing an instrumental role in
providing security and creating the space for TFG to operate in, and
we’re grateful for the bravery and commitment of the AMISOM troops from
Uganda and Burundi. The United States is proud to offer financial
support – nearly $150 million over the past two years, and additional
funds in the coming months. We will also continue to provide equipment
and training to the TFG as well as humanitarian assistance to the Somali
people where delivery is feasible and effective.
We are asking
other states in the region, particularly Arab states, to back the
Djibouti process and the African Union, and to follow through on pledges
of financial support. In addition, it is long past time for Eritrea to
cease and desist its support for al-Shabaab and to start being a
productive, rather than a destabilizing, neighbor.
I believe that
the United States, Kenya, the entire region, and the global community
have a stake in the success of President Sheikh Sharif’s government. I
particularly appreciated Sheikh Sharif’s asking for help in returning
children to school, in medical supplies to reopen hospitals, in giving
the people of Somalia who have suffered so much the services that they
deserve. I look forward to continuing consultations with the president
and to supporting the people of Somalia through this difficult time.
Thank you very much.
PRESIDENT SHEIKH SHARIF: (In Arabic.)
QUESTION:
(Inaudible) Shabaab to Americans? How big a threat a threat is the
Shabaab to Americans here in Kenya, where there’s this long and
not-so-well guarded border with Somalia, and also in the United States?
And
then on the Eritrea subject, there’s been many warnings by American
officials to Eritrea to cease and desist their support for the Shabaab.
They have not changed their position. When is some action going to be
taken?
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, let me answer the first question, and perhaps the president would want to add to that.
The
United States takes very seriously the threat that al-Shabaab poses,
first and foremost, to the people of Somalia, but also to people in the
region such as here in Kenya. Our information is that al-Shabaab not
only uses foreign fighters and foreign money, but foreign ideas in its
attack on the people of Somalia. And there is also no doubt that
al-Shabaab wants to obtain control over Somalia to use it as a base from
which to influence and even infiltrate surrounding countries and launch
attacks against countries far and near. And I think terrorists anywhere
are threats to people everywhere. Certainly, if al-Shabaab were to
obtain a haven in Somalia which could then attract al-Qaida and other
terrorist actors, it would be a threat to the United States.
With
respect to Eritrea, we are making it very clear that their actions are
unacceptable. Their interference with the rights of the Somali people to
determine their own future are the height of misplaced efforts and
funding, and we intend to take action if they do not cease.
PRESIDENT SHEIKH SHARIF: (Via
interpreter) I want to add a few points about Eritrea. We think that
solving a problem with another problem is not right, and this is what
Eritrea is doing. Because Eritrea is having problems with one of its
neighbors, it is not right to solve this problem through Somalia. As you
may know, in the African Union summit, all African leaders agreed that
sanctions should be placed on Eritrea. That is because Eritrea is
insisting on continuing its activities that are not helpful to the
entire Horn of Africa. And the place that this (inaudible) is not at a
point where we can keep quiet about it. We believe they still have an
opportunity to correct this – their methods.
MODERATOR: Next question (inaudible).
QUESTION:
My question is to Ms. Clinton, the Secretary of State of United States.
President Obama, he has mentioned in Ghana last month that the issue of
Somalia is no longer African, it’s global. So on your visit here to –
and your meeting with President Sheikh Sharif has been now is the
highest-ranking the United States had ever had with Somali leader. So
are there any new plans or programs towards Somalia in the short term?
Thank you.
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, as you know, we have
been the principal financial backer of AMISOM and we will continue to do
so. In addition to the military and security support that we are
providing and working with others to provide to the TFG, we intend to
respond to President Sheikh Sharif’s request for assistance to serve the
needs of the Somali people.
We also commended President Sheikh
Sharif and his cabinet for hiring Price Waterhouse to analyze and
monitor funding that goes into the TFG. We intend to ask other
countries, as I said, particularly in the Arab world and in the Somali
Contact Group, to fulfill the obligations that they have made to the TFG
and the Somali people. The TFG needs help with food, with medical
supplies, with unemployment – namely, jobs for people, with
infrastructure like roads, with refugees and internally displaced
people. And as they demonstrate their capacity to stabilize the country,
we need to be there to help them deliver the results of stability to
the people of Somalia who have suffered for so long.
QUESTION:
(Via interpreter) The question is if, because of a change in
administration, what is the policy of the new Administration that would
be different from the previous administration?
SECRETARY CLINTON:
Well, our support for Somalia is bipartisan. There was support before,
there is support now. But I think it is fair to say that President Obama
and I want to expand and extend our support for the Transitional
Federal Government in the ways that I have already mentioned. Very early
in the Administration, I made the decision, which the President
supported, to accelerate and provide aid to the TFG when it was in a
very difficult position. And we are very pleased that under President
Sheikh Sharif’s leadership the TFG is in a much stronger position now.
QUESTION:
Madame Secretary, can you rule out another U.S. military intervention
in Somalia? And then, because my dowry question was asked already
earlier at the town hall, I’m wondering if, looking ahead, you could
tell us what you plan to tell President Zuma when you see him on
Saturday about dealing with Zimbabwe. Successive administrations have
pressed and pressed and never gotten anywhere with the South Africans.
Thank you.
SECRETARY CLINTON: The United States is
supporting the African Union’s commitment through AMISOM. We believe
that is exactly the right approach to take. And we are supporting the
training and equipping of the TFG forces, which is, after all, in the
front of this fight to regain control of Somalia away from the violent
extremists.
And I do intend to speak not only with President Zuma
but with other members of his government, particularly the foreign
minister, about what more South Africa believes can be done to
strengthen the reform movement inside Zimbabwe, alleviate the suffering
of the people of Zimbabwe, and try to use its influence to mitigate
against the negative effects of the continuing presidency of President
Mugabe.
Thank you.
Remarks After Meeting With President of Somalia Sheik Sharif Sheik Ahmed
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Excerpts From Press Conference After Meeting Somali President
Nairobi, Kenya
August 6, 2009
SECRETARY CLINTON:
Just this week in Australia we have been reminded that there are those
who would use Somalia as a training ground for attacks around the world.
No one knows better than the president the challenges facing Somalia
and his people.
SECRETARY CLINTON: If al-Shabab
were to obtain a haven in Somalia which could then attract al-Qaida and
other terrorist actors it would be a threat to the United States.
SECRETARY CLINTON: The
United States is supporting the African Union's commitment through
AMISOM (African Union Mission to Somalia), we believe that is exactly
the right approach to take and we are supporting the training and
equiping of the TFG (Transitional Federal Government) forces, which is
after all in the front of this fight to regain control of Somalia away
from the violent extremists
SECRETARY CLINTON: And
with respect to Eritrea we are making it very clear that their actions
are unacceptable their interference with the rights of the Somali people
to determine their own future are the height of misplaced efforts and
funding and we intend to take action if they do not cease.