Somalia refuses to take back expelled UN envoy

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UNITED NATIONS, United States, Jan 5, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – UN Secretary-General
Antonio Guterres on Friday agreed to appoint a new UN envoy to Somalia after
its president refused to reverse a decision to expel a representative for
raising human rights concerns.

Guterres spoke by phone with President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed on Friday
— his second call to the Somali leader in three days — to once again urge
him to change his mind, according to diplomats.

But the president dug in his heels and said UN envoy Nicholas Haysom would
remain persona non grata and would not be allowed to return to Somalia,
diplomats told AFP.

Guterres “deeply regrets” Somalia’s decision, said UN spokesman Farhan
Haq, adding that the UN chief nevertheless intends to appoint a new UN envoy.

The UN Security Council met behind closed doors to agree on a response to
Somalia’s decision.

But during that meeting, China asked for more time to consider a draft
statement put forward by Britain that expressed regret at the decision,
diplomats said. The council was to reconsider its response on Saturday.

In the British-drafted text, the council would express its support for the
UN mission in Somalia and say it expects Somalia to fully cooperate with the
United Nations.

– No interference –

Haysom, a South African lawyer and experienced diplomat, was told to leave
Somalia on Tuesday after he questioned the government’s decision to arrest an
Al-Shabaab defector who was running in elections.

Muktar Robow, who defected from Al-Shabaab in 2017, was arrested last
month and flown to the capital Mogadishu after announcing his bid for the
state presidency in South West State.

The arrest sparked protests in the southwestern town of Baidoa on December
13-15 that were violently suppressed by Somalia’s security forces, leaving at
least 15 dead.

In a letter sent to the government, Haysom requested an investigation of
the protest violence and information on the legal basis for arresting Robow.

Haysom, who took up the post of UN envoy in October, warned the council
during a meeting on Thursday of a risk of conflict during elections in
Somalia’s federal states due to tensions with the central authorities.

The arrest of Robow could discourage other Al-Shabaab militants “who may
be considering exchanging violence for a political path,” said Haysom.

Somalia’s Ambassador Abukar Dahir Osman told the council that the United
Nations should not interfere in his country’s national affairs.

Former Al-Shabaab militants “cannot assume leadership positions without
going through stringent established rehabilitation programs,” he said, adding
that a terrorist should not be allowed to rebrand himself as an “ice cream
salesperson.”

The UN mission in Somalia is tasked with supporting peace efforts and the
strengthening of government institutions in the Horn of Africa nation, which
were ruined by decades of civil war.