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Somali FM calls for an end to UN arms embargo

Storyline:National News
Foreign Minister for Somalia, Ahmed Awad Isse, addresses the 73rd session of the United Nations General Assembly Saturday, Sept. 29, 2018, at the United Nations headquarters. (Frank Franklin II/Associated Press)

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Somalia’s foreign minister at the U.N. General Assembly said that his young government has made significant strides in fighting violent al-Shabab militants, and called on the world body to lift its long-standing arms embargo.

Ahmed Awad Isse says young people are no longer joining al-Shabab as they used to because “that ideology is no longer popular.”

In his address on Saturday, Isse said the Somali government has been engaging with religious leaders, young people, the elderly and women to “turn the tide against the twisted ideology of hate and religious intolerance.”

Isse also notes that many, including some of the militant group’s senior commanders, have taken the government’s amnesty offer and surrendered peacefully.

He said lifting the arms embargo would level the field in Somalia’s battle with extremist groups. He noted that “stronger fighting capacity would enable us to have the upper hand.”

Al-Shabab is trying to establish an Islamic state in Somalia and is the deadliest Islamic extremist group in sub-Saharan Africa.