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Sept,12,2005-Somali police block UN
aid work

President Yusuf say the capital,
Mogadishu is too dangerous
Police in the Somali town of Jowhar,
where the transitional government is
based, have stopped local UN staff
from entering their offices.
The UN children's agency, Unicef,
said no reason had been given.
Last week, foreign UN workers left
the town because of security
concerns after the arrival of some
1,000 troops to support President
Abdullahi Yusuf.
The government is divided with
several ministers in Mogadishu,
refusing to join the president in
Jowhar.
Unicef was operating several
projects in Jowhar including
education, health centres, water,
HIV/Aids, youth projects and other
humanitarian activities.
Its offices in Jowhar were also the
temporary base for other UN
agencies.
Reorganisation
Correspondents say the arrival of
the troops from Mr Yusuf's home
region of Puntland has raised
tension, with the Mogadishu groups
accusing the president of planning a
military offensive against them.
Somalia has been without a
functioning national government for
14 years and a transitional
parliament, sworn in a year ago, has
failed to end the anarchy.
Led by the speaker of parliament,
Sharif Hassan Sheikh Aden, more than
100 MPs have set up operations in
Mogadishu, but President Yusuf
refuses to return there saying it is
unsafe.
Mr Yusuf's allies say the troops
were part of a reorganisation of
armed forces to secure the
government's base.
Mr Yusuf had said in July that he
would recruit militia forces from
his northern stronghold of Puntland
to join a new army.
He has little support in Mogadishu
and has refused to move there while
it is still under the control of his
rivals.
The Mogadishu warlords were named as
ministers in Mr Yusuf's cabinet but
soon fell out with him, siding with
the parliament speaker.
Earlier they made threats to attack
Jowhar if Mr Yusuf established the
government there
_BBC
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