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Last Updated: Monday, 21 August 2006, 15:13 GMT 16:13 UK
Somalia PM names new government
Prime Minister Ghedi
Prime Minister Ghedi denies getting military help from Ethiopia
Somalia's interim prime minister has nominated a new cabinet, two weeks after the previous administration was sacked following mass resignations.

The new cabinet has 31 members where the previous one had more than 100, but many key members keep their old posts.

The interim government controls only a small area around its base in Baidoa.

In the past month it has been divided over possible peace talks with the Islamist group which controls the capital, Mogadishu.

Prime Minister Ali Mohamed Ghedi nominated the new cabinet only after extensive consultation with President Abdullahi Yusuf and the speaker of parliament, and this means that the nominations are likely to be accepted by parliament, the BBC's Mohammed Olad Hassan reports from Baidoa.

Talks

The announcement comes a week after the 14 August deadline that President Yusuf set for the nomination of a new cabinet.

While all the new cabinet members also served in the previous government, those figures who knew little about running a government have been excluded, says BBC Somali Service editor Yusuf Garaad.

KEY MINISTERS
map
Deputy prime minister
Abudullahi Ismael
(Ex-foreign minister)
Finance
Hassan Mohammed
(Warlord from Baidoa)
Security
Abdullahi Garrun
(From Baidoa)
Defence
Barre Adan
(Warlord controlling Kismayo port)
Interior
Hussein Aideed
(Former Mogadishu warlord)
Foreign
Ismael Hurre Buba
(From Somaliland)

The smaller new cabinet is therefore seen as a more appropriate selection of people to be in government.

The warlords who used to control Mogadishu - with the sole exception of Hussein Aideed - have been excluded from the new cabinet, since the dominance of the Islamic courts has robbed them of their power base.

The new cabinet includes several figures who opposed to Mr Ghedi in the previous cabinet, and their inclusion is likely to be the result of President Yusuf's influence.

It is still unclear whether the appointment of a new cabinet will facilitate dialogue with the Union of Islamic Courts (UIC).

The Islamists have repeatedly accused the government of bringing Ethiopian troops into Somalia, and have cited this as a reason for refusing talks with the interim administration.

However, diplomats in the region have been trying to persuade the UIC that it is in its own best interests to engage in dialogue with the interim government despite the presence of the Ethiopians.

Ethiopia is the Somali government's main ally against the Islamists, but both governments have denied the presence of Ethiopian soldiers on Somali territory.

However, Ethiopian troops were seen heading towards Baidoa on Sunday.

At the same time, the Somali government declared support for an Eritrean rebel group, the Eritrean Liberation Front, accusing Eritrea's government of supporting the Somali Islamists.

Regional rivals Ethiopia and Eritrea have both denied accusations that they are fighting a proxy war in Somalia.

Somalia's former government was named in 2004, following two years of peace talks in Kenya.

It had members from all the various clans and armed factions, which have battled for control of Somalia since it last had an effective national government in 1991.

However, the UIC was not represented - it has only emerged as a major power this year and now controls much of southern Somalia.




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