Somalia: Among fixing a broken world


Medeshi Jan 29, 2009
Fixing a broken world
From The Economist print edition
The planet’s most wretched places are not always the most dangerous

IN ALMOST any discussion of world affairs, there is one thing on which doves and hawks invariably agree: much more needs to be done to shore up states that are failing, in a state of collapse, or so poor that they are heading in that direction.
For development-minded people, such benighted places are an obvious concern because of their desperate suffering; and for hard-nosed strategists, states that hardly work are places where terrorists could step into the vacuum. Indeed there is a certain convergence between these points of view: aid workers agree that security is essential to prosperity, and generals want economic development to boost security.
In America these days, defence planners say they worry more about weak states, even non-states, than about strong ones. “Ungoverned, undergoverned, misgoverned and contested areas” offer fertile grounds for terrorists and other nefarious groups, says the Pentagon’s National Defence Strategy, issued last year. The penning of that document was overseen by the defence secretary, Robert Gates, who will remain in charge of defence policy under Barack Obama. Large chunks of its language could have been issued by bleeding-heart aid agencies or the United Nations: it speaks of the need to “build the capacity of fragile or vulnerable partners” and to address “local and regional conflicts” that exacerbate tensions and encourage drug-smuggling, gun-running and other illegality. To the chagrin of old-school sceptics, nation-building is now an integral part of American strategy.
Similarly, the European Union’s declared security strategy sees state failure as an “alarming” phenomenon. It opines that: “Neighbours who are engaged in violent conflict, weak states where organised crime flourishes, dysfunctional societies or exploding population growth on its borders all pose problems for Europe.”
A rather precise taxonomy is offered by Robert Cooper, a British diplomat and Eurocrat, in his book, “The Breaking of Nations”. He splits the world into three zones: Hobbesian or “pre-modern” regions of chaos; areas ruled effectively by modern nation-states; and zones of “postmodern” co-operation where national sovereignty is being voluntarily dissolved, as in the European Union. In his view, chaos in critical parts of the world must be watched carefully. “It was not the well-organised Persian Empire that brought about the fall of Rome, but the barbarians,” he writes.
Strategists have worried about failing states ever since the end of the cold war. At first, zones of war and chaos were seen primarily as threats to the people living within them, or not far away. But since the attacks on America in September 2001 such places have increasingly been seen as a threat to the entire world. Western intervention is now justified in the name of fighting terrorism, not just of altruism.
Take the case of Somalia: America sent troops there in 1992 to help the United Nations stave off a humanitarian catastrophe, but the armed chaos of Mogadishu soon drove it out. In recent years, America has again been active in that region, carrying out air strikes in Somalia against suspected jihadist camps. It supported Ethiopia’s military invasion in 2006 to defeat the Islamist militias that had taken power in Mogadishu (arguably causing even more chaos) and is now backing an African peacekeeping mission for the same reasons. The waters off the Somali coast, moreover, have become one of the prime zones of piracy at sea, disrupting shipping through the Suez Canal. Even China has felt the need to send warships to the Gulf of Aden to protect its shipping.
Afghanistan, too, is often seen as a classic example of the perils of collapsing states: acute poverty and years of civil war led to the rise of the Taliban and allowed al-Qaeda to turn into a global menace. After the American-led intervention in 2001, both have rebated themselves across the border in Pakistan’s lawless tribal regions, from where they wage a growing insurgency in southern Afghanistan, destabilise Pakistan and plot attacks against Western targets around the world.
Western intelligence agencies say that, with the recent improvement in security in Iraq (a totalitarian state that became a failed state only after the American-led invasion), the world’s jihadists now prefer to head for Pakistan, Somalia or Yemen.
Misrule, violence, corruption, forced migration, poverty, illiteracy and disease can all reinforce each other. Conflict may impoverish populations, increase the availability of weapons and debilitate rulers. Weak governments, in turn, are less able to stop corruption and the production and smuggling of arms and drugs, which may in turn help finance warlords, insurgents and terrorists.
Instability breeds instability. The chronic weaknesses of civil institutions in Sierra Leone and Liberia contributed to the outbreak of devastating civil wars in both countries, fuelled by the profits from the illegal smuggling of “blood diamonds”. Meanwhile war and genocide in Rwanda contributed to the collapse of the Democratic Republic of Congo in the 1990s. The chaos there, sustained in part by fighting over mineral resources, sucked in Rwanda, Burundi and Uganda. Chad and Sudan support rebels in each other’s countries.
At the very least, there is evidence that economic growth in countries next to failing states can be badly damaged. And if a poorly functioning but important oil-producing state like Nigeria were to fall apart, the economic fallout would be global. Moreover, weak governments may lack the wherewithal to identify and contain a pandemic that could spread globally.
That said, the interplay of these factors is hard to describe, and the very definition of failed states and ungoverned spaces is anything but simple. Few states have completely failed, except perhaps for Somalia. And even here, the territory is not completely ungoverned. A part of the country, called Somaliland, is more or less autonomous and stable—and another bit, Puntland, is relatively calm, although it is the source of much piracy. The region to the south is dominated by warring clans, but even here some aspects of normal life, such as mobile telephone networks, manage to survive.
Lesser breeds before the law
One starting point in any analysis of failed countries is the theory of Max Weber, the father of social science. He defined the state as the agency which successfully monopolises the legitimate use of force. But what does legitimate mean? In some places, state power is exercised, brutally but effectively, by whoever is top dog in a perpetual contest between kleptocrats or warlords whose behaviour is lawless in every sense.
If definitions are elusive, what about degrees of state failure? Perhaps the most detailed study is the index of state weakness in developing countries drawn up by the Brookings Institution, a think-tank in Washington, DC. This synthesises 20 different indicators and identifies three “failed” states—Somalia, Afghanistan and the Democratic Republic of Congo—along with 24 other “critically weak” ones. One striking feature of such tables is that states fail in different ways. Among the ten worst performers, Iraq is comparatively wealthy and does well in social welfare, but is highly insecure; Zimbabwe is comparatively secure, but ruined economically and politically. The next ten-worst performers are even more mixed.
The collapse of states is as varied as the states themselves. Some were never functioning states at all, just lines drawn on maps by colonisers. Many African borders encompassed lots of ethnic groups and divided some of them. When the colonialists left, so did the bureaucracies that supported these entities, abandoning them to poverty, civil war or both. The cold war helped fuel many conflicts, for instance in Angola and Mozambique, where superpowers backed rival factions. Other parts of Africa, such as Somalia, fell apart after the withdrawal of superpower support.
The conflicts of Central America died down in the years following the end of the cold war. But the fighting in Colombia has dragged on, as the FARC guerrillas finance themselves through drugs and kidnapping. The end of Soviet communism freed or created many countries in Europe. Some prospered as they were absorbed into NATO and the European Union, while others fragmented bloodily, notably Yugoslavia. Enclaves of “frozen conflicts” remain on Russia’s periphery—for example Abkhazia, South Ossetia and Transdniestria which survive as unrecognised statelets with the Kremlin’s support.
Whichever way state collapse is assessed, it will always be an imperfect measure of priorities for policymakers. On a map of the world using the Brookings index of weak states, the epicentre is self-evidently sub-Saharan Africa, particularly around Congo, with blobs of red in Iraq, Afghanistan and Myanmar. But this overlaps only in part with, say, the ungoverned spaces that America’s State Department regards as the nastiest havens for international terrorists, such as al-Qaeda.
On that list, Iraq and Afghanistan figure prominently—but in these countries, arguably, the problem is more one of national insurgencies than international terror. Once the tribes of western Iraq (whose grievances were local) had been induced to switch sides to the Americans, al-Qaeda was quickly evicted from that area. Al-Qaeda’s senior leaders are sheltering in Pakistan, yet this ranks as only the 33rd- weakest state on the Brookings index.
One area of concern is the Sahel, a vast semi-arid area south of the Sahara desert. The Americans fear that in this region Islamist terrorists could begin co-operating with existing rebel outfits, such as the Tuareg, or with drug smugglers. The Pentagon has created a new Africa Command to help monitor the area more closely and train local government forces.
The State Department identifies other ungoverned spaces such as Yemen (30th on the Brookings index), parts of Colombia (47th), the seas between the Philippines (58th) and Indonesia (77th), bits of Lebanon (93rd) and the “tri-border area” between Brazil, Argentina and Paraguay (none ranked as particularly weak).
Conversely many of the most wretched places in the world—Congo, Burundi, Zimbabwe, Haiti, Myanmar and North Korea—are not known as havens for international terrorists. Attacks linked to al-Qaeda, moreover, have been conducted in well-run countries such as Britain and Spain. For American counter-terrorism officials, the biggest terrorist threat to the homeland is posed by European radicals who are able to travel to America more freely than, say, a Yemeni. Some scholars worry about social breakdown in poor mega-cities. But to regard the British Midlands and the banlieues of Paris as ungoverned spaces would be stretching a point.
The common denominator for al-Qaeda’s activity is not state failure, but the fact that attacks are carried out by extremists claiming to act in the name of the world’s Muslims. Their safe havens are not necessary geographical but social. Being based in a remote spot, far from government authorities, may be important for training, building esprit de corps and, in the view of intelligence agencies, trying to develop chemical and biological weapons.
But for al-Qaeda, remoteness alone is not enough. Terrorists need protection too, and that has to be secured from local populations as in Pakistan’s tribal belt. International terrorists, moreover, need to be able to travel, communicate and transfer funds; they need to be within reach of functioning population centres. Stewart Patrick of the Council on Foreign Relations, an American think-tank, argues in a forthcoming book that international terrorists do not find the most failed states particularly attractive; they prefer “weak but moderately functional” states. The shell of state sovereignty protects them from outside intervention, but state weakness gives them space to operate autonomously.
Afghanistan’s history is telling. Al-Qaeda was forged from the Arab volunteers who had fought with the Afghan mujahideen against the Soviet occupation of the country. With the end of the cold war and the fall of the communist government in Kabul, the country fell into civil war. Arab fighters largely pulled out in dismay.
Some went to Bosnia and Chechnya. Others intensified insurgencies back home in Egypt and Algeria. Osama bin Laden found shelter in Sudan under the protection of its Islamist regime. What took him back to Afghanistan was the rise of the Taliban. Afghanistan at that time was not an ungoverned space, but a state sponsor of terrorism; indeed, al-Qaeda arguably became a terrorist sponsor of a state.
Terrorism aside, what of other global plagues? Afghanistan is still the world’s biggest source of the opium poppy, despite the presence of foreign troops. Next is Myanmar, also near the bottom of the pile. But Colombia, though not “critically” weak, is the biggest producer of cocaine. The cocaine routes pass through countries of all sorts; Mexico is among the top performers in the Brookings index, but is the main drugs highway to America. Similarly, piracy depends on geography. A non-existent state may allow pirates to flourish, but without the proximity of a shipping route they have no targets to prey on.
Measures of corruption, such as Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index, correlate strongly with the index of state weakness. But here too there are anomalies: Russia is ranked as a middling country in terms of state weakness, but does worse in the corruption index; Italy scores below some African countries.
When it comes to pandemics, there is no simple correlation between disease and dysfunctional states. The countries suffering most from HIV/AIDS are in southern Africa: apart from Zimbabwe, most governments in that region are quite well run. The states that have seen the most cases of the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu are Indonesia, Vietnam, China and Egypt, none of them among the worst cases of misrule or non-rule.
Everybody agrees that more effective government around the world is desirable, especially for those living in or near broken countries. Failed states always cause misery, but only sometimes are they a global threat. Given that failures come in so many varieties, fixing them is bound to be more of an art than a science.

News about the former British protectorate of Somaliland

Medeshi
Makwaia wa KUHENGA
Daily News; Thursday,January 29, 2009
News about the former British protectorate of Somaliland
News about the former British protectorate of Somaliland which broke away from mainstream Somalia in 1991 with the ouster of the former military ruler, General Siad Barre, is scanty. One has to browse the Internet to find out what is happening.
I did this week. The news is that Somaliland will be holding Presidential Elections on March 29, this year, complete with competing voices in the country's polity which includes a fully-fledged Parliament, House of Elders and House of Representatives.
With a population of 3.5 million people, Somaliland has three major political parties. The last vote was taken in 2003 and the next vote which was due last year but delayed for some reason will now take place in March. In the last vote, Dahin Riyaale Kahin of the 'Unity, Democracy and Independence Party' won the vote. He is expected to stand again this year, challenged by a buoyant opposition.
A dispatch by Reuters I gleaned on the Internet says: "Somaliland hopes this year''s presidential elections will lead to international recognition of the northern Somali enclave as an independent country, according to officials. "The polls are seen by many as an acid test for the former British protectorate which broke away from Somalia in 1991 when the ouster of former dictator Siad Barre plunged the Horn of Africa into anarchy.
"Somaliland has enjoyed relative peace and prosperity and has held previous democratic elections, but analysts say it is not recognised globally because of concerns that rewriting colonial borders would open a Pandora's Box of other session claims."
Reuters quoted Somaliland's Chairman of the Electoral Commission as saying: "The election is a test for Somaliland's recognition bid."
So non-recognition of this obviously de facto state of Somaliland is most unfortunate given the reality of the fact that Somalia with its capital of Mogadishu in the south, as known and recognized by the international community is, to all intent and purposes; a failed state.
As we have noticed in the intervening period, Mogadishu's Somalia has no government to speak of. The Ethiopian-backed government has but collapsed, preceding which we have witnessed the withdrawal of Ethiopian troops.
The Taliban-like rebel forces, Al-Shabaab, are threatening to capture Mogadishu and impose a Taliban like fundamentalist regime. Coupled with this spectre has been the news of the emergence of Somali pirates on the loose in the high seas in the east coast of Africa. These pirates have become an international scourge demanding concerted international action.
So the question really is: If there is a de facto state of Somaliland in the north which has proved its efficacy as a sustainable state, why has the international community been hesitant to recognize it? Is the caution to avert a Pandora Box really meaningful?
Is it not true that an internationally recognized Somaliland state will be a stabilizing factor in the Horn of Africa rather than the whole area becoming a no man's land or a den of pirates?
These are the questions to be addressed especially by the African Union and the United Nations. And indeed they are the questions requiring the attention of the big boys of this unipolar world we live in these days.
Information made available to me by a Somaliland contact group in the United States -- Somaliland-American Council - has it that Somaliland government authorities have arrested 11 US residents who were caught smuggling Anti-aircraft missiles into Hargeisa, the capital city of Somaliland.
"The Somaliland government has information that indicates these weapons were originated from Eritrea and transported to Galgudud region in Somalia, where the arrested persons were being trained by the Al-Shabaab group now poised to overrun Mogadishu," says the Somaliland-American newsletter. According to the newsletter, Al-Shabaab Taliban-like rebel group has links to Somali Americans living in the United States.
So really, if Somaliland is not supported by offering it formal recognition by the powers that be including the United States and Britain - Somaliland former colonial power - the whole country from the South to the North and indeed the whole Horn of Africa will be engulfed into the flames of a senseless war and piracy eschewed in a bizarre ideology.
To my mind, the best option would be to support a de facto Somaliland state which has proved its sustainability as it has been able to run elected governments and democratic institutions as long as 1991. This will be a spur to the rest of the former unified republic to purge itself of piracy and gangsterism.

Somalia:Who do pirates call to get their cash?


Medeshi Jan 29, 2009
Somalia: Who do pirates call to get their cash?
The hijacking of ships off the coast of Somalia has become a mini-industry, with another seized on Thursday. The ransoms are always paid - but how? Simon Cox goes on the money trail and finds all roads lead to one destination: London.
Piracy off the coast of Somalia is big business. Last year alone pirate gangs were paid an estimated £35m from holding scores of ships and hundreds of crew members to ransom.
But securing their release is the responsibility of a hidden mini-industry of lawyers, negotiators and security teams based nearly 7,000km (4,200 miles) away, in London, UK, the business capital of the world's maritime industry.
The key players in this sector like to keep their activities as discreet as possible but in my investigation I gained access to people involved in every part of the ransom chain.
When a ship's owner discovers one of their fleet has been hijacked, the first port of call for them is normally to a lawyer like Stephen Askins, whose firm is one of the few that deals with kidnaps and ransoms at sea.
"We would expect to be called early," says Mr Askins. "And how you then deal with the negotiations will be a team decision.
There's no official "how to pay a ransom" rulebook - and the uncertainty leads "lots of sensitivity".
"People will do it in different ways," says Mr Askins, "but at the end of the day it's somebody from the owner's side talking to someone from the pirate's side, negotiating their way to a final settlement."
No two kidnaps are the same but the proliferation of attacks off the coast of Somalia in the past year means a pattern has been established where the pirates see it as a business. They may be armed and dangerous but, Mr Askins says, money is their chief motivation.
"They are negotiating for money, therefore anybody who has been on holiday and has tried to bargain with an Egyptian market trader for a carpet will understand how difficult it is to negotiate a conclusion. But we don't have the option of walking away, we have got to keep negotiating."
It's a radical departure from the airline hijackings of previous decades. Then, hijackers, who tended to be politically motivated, knew it was only a matter of time before special forces would be called in and try to kill them. Ransoms were often not paid.
(Photo: Two pirates patrol their captured ship)
But Somali piracy is different. Paying a ransom is not illegal under British law, unless it's to terrorists. And while governments have failed to clamp down to hijackings, a precedent of paying up has been established. So, as soon as pirates set foot on a ship they know pay day is only a matter of time.
The next link in the chain is a specialist negotiator, whose job is to try to reach a reasonable price.
Going rate
Negotiations tend to begin with astronomical demands from the hijackers before the price is bargained downwards.
James Wilkes, who runs specialist maritime risk company Gray Page, which has been involved in negotiations in several hijackings in Somalia, says it can mean daily contact with pirates for several months. The average hijack lasts two months before a ransom is paid.
The going ransom rate is $1m-$2m, but getting to a final figure is like a "tense boardroom negotiation" he says.
"A commercial transaction is probably a good way to describe it. They have hijacked the ship, the crew and its cargo and they want a certain amount of money for its release.
"It's about finding the right way to get the ship released and on the right terms, although human lives are involved and the consequences of something going wrong are quite significant."
But agreeing a ransom leads to an even bigger headache - getting the money to the pirates.
It's fraught with difficulties. The ransom for the Sirius Star oil tanker, hijacked in November, appeared to have been dropped from the air. But normally it means delivering a huge wodge of cash by sea to the hijackers, who will have anchored off the coast of northern Somalia.
Fixed overheads
Once a drop-off boat and crew have been hired and the weather negotiated, there's another big hurdle, according to risk consultant Darren Dickson: more pirates.
Navigating the high seas with a stash of money is not for the fainthearted.
"Some of these people who have done these drop offs by boat actually have to fend off pirates as they are delivering the ransom themselves," says Mr Dickson. His firm has delivered ransoms to several pirate gangs.
Dodging the pirates is only one difficulty - another is to make sure the good guys know what you're up to as well. According to Mr Dickson, of Drum Cussac, it's vital that "you're not going to be looked at as a pirate vessel... then you might get taken out by a naval vessel."
All these specialist services don't come cheap in the UK. Factor in the cost of lawyers, risk consultants, security advisers, as well as the fixed overheads, and delivering the money to the pirates "can lead to doubling the ransom amount," says Simon Beale, a marine underwriter.
Last year Somali pirates pocketed an estimated $50m. Not all of this is going to British lawyers, negotiators and security teams but a fair chunk of it will be. It has led to some criticism, particularly in Spain, that London is profiting from crime.
"I don't think people are trying to exploit the situation," says maritime lawyer Mr Askins. "We are very much trying to do the job we have always done at the rates we would charge in any other case."
And what happens to the tens of millions of pounds that the pirates make?
All the kidnap specialists who deal with the Somali pirates say it's a purely criminal enterprise. But Bruno Schiemsky, a Kenyan arms analyst, believes there is an even darker link - between the pirates and the radical Islamist group al-Shabab.
He says the pirates will pay a percentage of the ransom to al-Shabab - as much as 50 per cent in areas where the group is in control.
"It's an alliance of convenience, which makes it fragile," says Mr Schiemsky, "but for the moment both parties - pirates and al-Shabab - see the value of working together since they have a common enemy, the international community, and this relationship is only getting stronger through time. "
Trying to verify this is difficult. When I ask the Serious Organised Crime Agency if it has any suspicions about where the money was going, I get a firm "no comment".
But the American diplomat chairing a new international group of 24 nations which is looking at tackling Somali piracy said US counter piracy officials wanted to find out more about how pirate operations were paid for and which "outside sources" were involved.
If a link was established between the pirates and terrorists it could create serious problems for all parties involved. As one underwriter summed it up, "we'd all be going to jail".

Somalia: Ethiopian pullout seen likely to aid country's stability


Medeshi Jan 29, 2009

Ethiopian pullout seen likely to aid country's stability

Matt Purple

THE WASHINGTON TIMES
(Photo: A vehicle packed with explosives was detonated outside a base for African Union peacekeepers in the Somali capital of Mogadishu ...)
A suicide attack on African Union peacekeepers punctuated last week's withdrawal. And Islamist rebels Monday took control of the airport and parliament building in Baidoa, the last stronghold of a U.N.-backed government.
But several Africa specialists say that the absence of Ethiopian forces, which drove rebels from the Somali capital in 2006, could help bring about greater stability in the long-term by depriving Somali extremist groups of a substantial recruiting tool.
Ted Dagne, who analyzes Africa for the Congressional Research Service, said the departure of Ethiopians - viewed as an occupying power by many Somalis - could loosen the grip of Al-Shabab, an Islamic militia that gained notoriety during the two-year Ethiopian occupation of the capital. Al-Shabab is often compared to al Qaeda and the Taliban.
"Most of the Shabab joined because they hated Ethiopia and hated what they saw as an aggression," Mr. Dagne said.
Somalia, a country on the Horn of Africa, has been beset by violence for decades, usually among rival warlords competing for power.
The nation has not had a stable government since 1991. Authority is currently vested with the U.N.-backed Transitional Federal Government (TFG), whose top officials have scattered in exile.
Ethiopia invaded Somalia in 2006, hoping to prop up the TFG and repel the Islamic Courts Union, which then controlled Mogadishu.
After the Ethiopian invasion, Al-Shabab spread rapidly, launching frequent guerrilla attacks against Ethiopians and the Somali TFG. Al-Shabab currently controls much of the Somali south, including Kismayo, the nation's third-largest city, pockets of Mogadishu and much of Baidoa.
Al-Shabab rose to prominence after Ethiopian troops repelled the Islamic Courts Union.
Mr. Dagne said that, when the latest bloodshed began, moderate elements fled the country, leaving Islamists to fill the gaps.
Though Shariah law is codified in its constitution, Somalia is considered more secular than many Muslim nations, with most of the fighting carried out by rival warlords rather than religious sects.
Rank and file Somalis joined Al-Shabab, more out of nationalistic pride than subscription to Islamist ideology, Mr. Dagne said.
The militant tactics of Al-Shabab have been condemned worldwide, but the Ethiopian military has also come under criticism amid reports of human rights abuses.
Human Rights Watch recently compiled a report that accused the Ethiopians of war crimes, including raiding mosques and firing indiscriminately into crowds of civilians.
As Ethiopian troops withdrew from Mogadishu, jubilant Somalis reportedly ran into the streets and cheered their departure.
John Prendergast, co-chairman of the Enough Project, which advocates conflict resolution and development in Africa, said that the withdrawal of Ethiopian forces was encouraging. But he cautioned against hastily trying to install a new government.
"The fatal flaw in the past 19 years ... has been the urge by the peacemakers to put something in place immediately," he said. "So they naturally turn to the biggest guns: the warlords and some of the Islamist groups.
"The key to success will be resisting that urge and taking the time to cobble together an alliance among the real authorities on the ground," he said.
Peace negotiations are currently under way in neighboring Djibouti, between the TFG and the Islamist Alliance for the Re-Liberation of Somalia, which is considered moderate compared with Al-Shabab.

A vehicle packed with explosives was detonated outside a base for African Union peacekeepers in the Somali capital of Mogadishu on Saturday.
Thus far, the talks have succeeded in negotiating the resignation of President Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed and the Ethiopian pullout.
African specialists are urging the Obama administration to support this process, though its effectiveness so far has been limited.
The Bush administration had indicated support for deploying U.N. peacekeeping forces, a strategy Mr. Prendergast said could lead to disaster.
"[The presence of U.N. peacekeepers is] the worst possible scenario, which could be perceived as countering Al-Shabab," he said. "This would provide an almost galvanizing catalyst for support for Al-Shabab, almost as much as the Ethiopians did."
A State Department official downplayed concerns over U.N. involvement and expressed optimism that a new Somali government could be in place shortly. The official requested anonymity because he was not authorized to speak for attribution.
Ultimately, U.S. policy toward Somalia may be dictated in part by the Obama administration's strategy for dealing with Islamic militancy, analysts say.
Al-Shabab shares al Qaeda's vision of uniting the world under Shariah law Mr. Dagne said. "If these people are not contained, not only would they take over Mogadishu, but they would go beyond Mogadishu."

Somaliland: Interview by SAC: Dr. Mohamed Abdi Gabose


Medeshi Jan 29, 2009
SOMALILAND AMERICAN NEWSLETTER
Interview by SAC: Dr. Mohamed Abdi Gabose

You are cordially invited to participate in a conferenced call hosted by Somaliland American Council. The keynote speaker is Dr. Mohamed Abdi Gabose.

Date and Time: Sunday, February 1, 2009 at 1 PM ET (6 PM London time)
Agenda: Current political affairs, voter registration, and presidential elections

To participate in this conference call please do the following: 1 - Call the conference bridge number: Dial-in #: (712) 432-1001
2 - Enter conference Attendee Passcode: 411-293-320 then (enter #)
3 - Please email questions to Dr. Gabose to:

Somaliland American Council

Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed may become the next president of Somalia


Medeshi
Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed may become the next president of Somalia
NAIROBI, 29 January 2009
Somalia's parliament, meeting in Djibouti, is expected to elect a new president on 30 January, to replace Abdullahi Yusuf, who resigned at the end of December 2008 after prolonged differences with the prime minister.
Fourteen candidates are vying for the position but observers say two stand out. However, whoever takes over faces the daunting task of trying to rebuild a nation that has been at war for nearly 18 years, leaving more than one million displaced and up to 3.5 million people needing aid. Not only does the winner inherit a broken country but also the task of bringing in those in opposition that are not involved in the current talks, including the militant Al-Shabab group.
Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed
In his late 40s, he is the leader of a faction of the Eritrea-based Alliance for the Re-liberation of Somalia (ARS). He is also the former chairman of the Union of Islamic Courts (UIC), which was ousted in late 2006 by Ethiopian-backed Somali troops. He is considered a relative moderate and led his group into negotiations with the Transitional Federal Government (TFG).
Ahmed started out as a former lieutenant of faction leader Mohamed Dheere until they fell out in 2003. In the same year, he helped to set up the SiSi neighbourhood Islamic court to combat rampant crime and banditry in the poor neighbourhoods of north Mogadishu. He comes from a long line of religious leaders. He is from the Abgal sub-clan of the Hawiye clan.
After falling out with the secular warlord controlling the town, Ahmed became a secondary school teacher in Mogadishu, where a gang abducted one of his 12-year-old students. The captors demanded a ransom from the boy's family - a moment Ahmed called a turning point. In 2004, he became chairman of the group, now made up of 11 courts and known as the UIC.
Nur Hassan Hussein
In his 70s and popularly known as Nur Ade, he was appointed prime minister in October 2008 by Yusuf. Hussein replaced Ali Mohamed Gedi, who was blamed for contributing to the displacement of hundreds of thousands from Mogadishu. He is considered a pragmatist and cautious. He is credited with overseeing the withdrawal of Ethiopian troops. Hussein is a lawyer by training and a former police colonel, who, until his appointment, had been secretary-general of the Somali Red Crescent Society since 1991. Like his predecessor, Hussein is a member of the Abgal sub-clan of the Hawiye clan, which is dominant in Mogadishu and the surrounding areas.
Other candidates, considered long shots, however, include Maj-Gen Maslah Mohamed Siad, the son of late President Siad Barre, and former Prime Minister Ali Khalif Glayr, who is currently teaching at a university in the United States.
irin

Somaliland: A message to the Awdalians

Medeshi Jan 29, 2009
A Message for the Awdalians
Looking into recent complaints of the Awdalian about the Somaliland voter registration, perhaps it would be better for them to choose not to be part of Somaliland in which case , they will have to join their brethren in Djibouti or Ethiopia through mass immigration and exodus leaving the territory behind.
Awdalians have been given a preferences by the Somaliland people in order to alleviate their fears and make them feel comfortable with their guilt of supporting the Siyad Barre regime that has killed thousands of Somalilanders with their support.
Time has changed and Somaliland does not need to appease any certain clan and , should the need arise, the SNM should be called back to take quick action to re-educate certain communities that do not accept the genuineness of Somaliland reconciliations process. This could include both of the Awdalians and others that are still opposing the Somaliland cause. Somalilanders should stand by their motto that any one that does not like Somaliland should leave it otherwise!!!!
Have your say :

China marches on in Africa


Medeshi
China marches on in Africa
By Alistair Thomson
DAKAR, Jan 28 (Reuters) - Chinese businessmen are taking a long-term view and pursuing strategic expansion in Africa even though China's multiplying investments on the continent have lost some lustre in the global downturn.
Beijing and Chinese companies have pledged tens of billions of dollars to Africa in loans and investments mostly to secure raw materials for the world's fastest-growing large economy.
That long-term interest remains intact, despite a worldwide economic slump that has hit China's exports to the rich world and a sharp decline in Africa's mineral shipments to China.
China-Africa trade has surged by an average 30 percent a year this decade, soaring to nearly $107 billion in 2008.
"China is in Africa for the long term, and strategically," said David Shinn, a former U.S. ambassador to Ethiopia and Burkina Faso who teaches at George Washington University's Elliott School of International Affairs.
"They will not veer from this, in my view," he said.
Far from retreating, many Chinese businessmen are hunting for bargains.
Chinese and Indian firms have expressed interest in taking over Zambia's top cobalt producer Luanshya Copper Mines since it halted operations in December, Zambian state media reported.
South Africa's Standard Bank, itself 20 percent owned by the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC), said last month it was advising Chinese mining clients on buying opportunities in Africa and elsewhere.
"They are looking at 2009 and saying 'This is a time we see as a very big buying opportunity. We've got the backing from government, we've got the financial means'," Thys Terblanche, the bank's head of mining and metals investment banking, told Reuters.
Beyond mining, Chinese state companies are pushing ahead with strategic energy sector investments and infrastructure; private outfits are continuing to expand in technology areas.
"Some developed Western countries hit by the financial crisis are reducing their investment in Africa. Objectively, this is a powerful opportunity for Chinese businesses to expand their investment and market share in Africa," Cui Yongqian, a former Chinese ambassador to the Republic of Congo and Central African Republic, told a China-Africa trade forum this month.
Trade with Angola, China's biggest source of African crude oil, reached $25.3 billion in 2007 and Beijing has offered Luanda $5 billion in oil-backed loans.
Shenzhen-based Huawei Technologies, China's biggest telecoms equipment maker, is pushing south from its established stamping ground in North Africa.
"I see no reason why they would want to decrease their investments in the telecommunications sector, because that's profitable for them," said George Washington University's Shinn.
"It will vary according to sector and country ... It's very dangerous to generalise about the China-Africa relationship," he said. "They will certainly make tactical retreats where the economy requires it."
LONG-TERM VIEW
Even China's slower economic growth far outpaces that of other major economies. Beijing says it can achieve 8 percent growth in 2009. The IMF says it may cut its forecast to about 5 percent, from the 9 percent it predicted in October.
While competitors lay off workers and delay new projects, China Non-Ferrous Metals Corporation is opening a copper smelter this month in Chambishi town, which Zambia has transformed into a tax-free economic zone to attract Chinese investment.
Zambian President Rupiah Banda and China's Trade Minister Cheng Deming launched a second economic zone this month near the capital Lusaka, where Chinese firms will assemble electrical goods such as television sets and cellphones for export.
"Zambia is still an attractive investment destination (and this will give) confidence to existing firms operating here not to start scaling down their operations," Banda said.
Zambia's Copper Belt is witnessing a growth in Chinese deals.
"In Zambia, mining investment is large-scale and long-term," said Xing Houyuan, director of multinational business at China's Academy of International Trade and Economic Cooperation, which is affiliated to Beijing's Commerce Ministry.
"I don't see any likelihood of a pullback ... Companies won't give up investment plans because of the short term. The biggest impact is likely to be on projects that are still in the planning stage, where the money had not really been committed yet," Xing said.
In Liberia, China Union has just signed a $2.6 billion contract to develop the Bong iron ore deposit.
CONGO AND GUINEA
China also insists the slowdown will not dampen interest.
"We will continue to have a vigorous aid programme here and Chinese companies will continue to invest as much as possible in Africa because it is a win-win solution," Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi said in South Africa in mid-January.
However, the global slowdown has forced some Chinese businesses to close operations in Africa and prompted a re-think of some of the multi-billion-dollar mega-deals that blazed a trail across the world's poorest continent.
Democratic Republic of Congo and Guinea are cases in point.
DR Congo rode the boom in commodities to attract a wave of foreign investment in its rich but long-neglected copper, cobalt, gold and other mineral resources after post-war elections in 2006. Now that dream is fading.
"We have one processing mill and several workshops in Congo. We have closed them. There are many Chinese-invested firms in Congo and I understand most of them have shut down their operations," said a marketing director at a private firm in China's eastern province of Zhejiang, which supplies cobalt and nickel compounds for use in mobile phone batteries.
"I don't think we will resume production in the factories in Congo any time soon. We expect the economic slowdown could worsen in this year and weigh on the prices further," he said, requesting anonymity because he was not authorised to speak to the media.
Africa's heavy dependence on resource exports means it feels any squeeze more painfully. Global trade fell an annualised 3.7 percent between September 2008 and November last year, its biggest drop since 2001.
Congo's franc has fallen 20 percent against the dollar in less than four months and foreign reserves are at a five-year low. The government is seeking a $200 million bailout from the International Monetary Fund's Exogenous Shocks Facility.
A much-trumpeted $9 billion package of Chinese loans, investment and infrastructure projects in return for Congolese minerals contracts may be cut back to $6 billion, a diplomat in Kinshasa said, partly to appease the IMF which has expressed voiced concern at Congo taking on such huge debts.
Guinea, the world's top exporter of bauxite aluminium ore, had hoped for its own multi-billion-dollar deal with China to build hydropower dams, roads and bridges in return for mines.
Talks have dragged as the economic climate has worsened, hampered by Guinea's instability and a coup last month after the death of President Lansana Conte, said Ahmed Tidiane Diallo, director-general for mining projects at the Mines Ministry.
Gabon, similarly eager to cement a 1.6 trillion CFA franc ($3 billion) contract to develop the 360-million-tonne Belinga iron ore deposit, has accused its Chinese partners of dragging their feet amid the uncertain economic environment. (Additional reporting by Joe Bavier in Kinshasa, Saliou Samb in Conakry, Eric Onstad in London, David Lewis in Dakar, Lucy Hornby and Chris Buckley in Beijing, Moumine Ngarmbassa in N'Djamena, Antoine Lawson in Libreville, Alfred Cang in Shanghai, Mabvuto Banda in Lilongwe, Daniel Wallis in Nairobi; Editing by Louise Ireland and Pascal Fletcher)

Donald Rumsfeld to stand trial for war crimes?


Medeshi Jan 27, 2009
Donald Rumsfeld to stand trial for war crimes?
A UN official says there is enough evidence that former US defense secretary Donald Rumsfeld could be brought to justice for war crimes.
The United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture Manfred Nowak in an interview on Monday told CNN that the international body had enough evidence to prosecute Rumsfeld for his direct authorization of tortures at US detention centers in 2002.
"We have clear evidence," Nowak said. "In our report that we sent to the United Nations, we made it clear that former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld clearly authorized torture methods and he was told at that time by Alberto Mora, the legal council of the Navy, 'Mr. Secretary, what you are actually ordering here amounts to torture.' So, there we have the clear evidence that Mr. Rumsfeld knew what he was doing but, nevertheless, he ordered torture." The UN torture official earlier in an interview with Germany's ZDF television had said that "I think the evidence is on the table."
Nowak said that the United States had an "obligation" to probe former President George Bush's Administration for their involvement in torture.
A bipartisan Senate survey last month revealed that Rumsfeld and other high-ranking administration officials were responsible for detainee abuse at Guantanamo Bay Prison.
The Los Angeles Times said on December 12, 2008 that the report directed its most pointed criticism at Rumsfeld's decision in December 2002 to authorize the use of harsh interrogation techniques at the Guantanamo Bay facility. The report described Rumsfeld's directive as "a direct cause for detainee abuse" at Guantanamo and concluded that it "influenced and contributed to the use of abusive techniques, including military working dogs, forced nudity and stress positions, in Afghanistan and Iraq."
The coercive measures were based on a document signed by Bush in February, 2002.
US new President Barack Obama has ordered for the notorious US facility at Guantanamo to be shut down. But the so-called "enhanced interrogation techniques" have already destroyed the lives of many who had kept for years at US prisons worldwide without even charges.
"It's too painful, it's too deep, it's too dark and fills me with sadness... They did everything they could to destroy me when I was completely innocent," says former US detainee Mohammad Saad describing six years of humiliation, interrogation and ill-treatment under US orders in Egypt, Afghanistan and Guantanamo Bay.

Somalia's Sh . Sharif promises good relations with the neibhouring countries


Medeshi
Somalia's Sh. Sharif promises good relations with neighbouring countries
DJIBOUTI — Somali opposition leader Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed is vowing to reconcile all warring parties, rebuild his war-ravaged country and improve relations with all neighbors, including arch foe Ethiopia, if elected president.
"I believe there is a big hope of creating a government of national unity," Sheikh Sharif told Reuters on Tuesday, January 27.
"There are no major differences between the Somali people."
Sheikh Sharif, the presidential candidate of the opposition Alliance for the Re-liberation of Somalia (ARS), said it was time for all Somalis to find peace.
"The insurgents had been fighting for the Ethiopian withdrawal. Now they have pulled out of the country, there is no reason to fight and kill more Somalis."
Al-Shebab group seized control of the south-central town of Baidoa, the seat of parliament, on Monday, January 26, a few hours after Ethiopia withdrew its troops.
The group, once an off-shot of Sheikh Sharif's Islamic Courts, had relentlessly fought Ethiopian and government forces and is threatening to continuing fighting until the implementation of Shari`ah.
"If they have a political agenda, we are ready to talk to them. And the second issue may be based on religion, and we are ready to discuss that with them," Sheikh Sharif.
"In this new era, we have to improve security. We will try to join all the forces available, whether they are insurgents, the current security forces or former military," he vowed.
"What these young militia men believe is not what they were born into. We will try to convince them how valuable it is to be a security officer working for the nation's interest."
Peaceful Region
Sheikh Sharif, whose Islamic Courts Union ruled Somalia for six months in 2006 before being ousted by Ethiopian troops, promised better relations with all neighbors.
"It is very, very necessary to improve our relations with the neighboring countries and to end the long dispute between Somalia and Ethiopia."
Ethiopia, traditionally seen by Somalis as a Christian rival, completed its troops withdrawal on Sunday.
Addis Ababa sent thousands of troops to Somalia to topple the Islamic Courts, which briefly restored a rare peace to Somalia.
Sheikh Sharif expressed hope that a detente with Ethiopia would help rebuild his war-wrecked country.
"That will help the region's development, because poverty in the region is encouraging the conflict to continue and we have to stand for eradicating it."
On Tuesday, Somali lawmakers extended by five days the time period needed to elect a new president to replace Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed who resigned last month.
The parliament was expanded a day earlier to give the ARS 200 seats in the new 500-member legislature as part of a UN-brokered power-sharing deal.
Somalia has had no effective central authority and been embroiled in almost uninterrupted inter-clan and civil strife since the 1991 ouster of former president Mohamed Siad Barre.

SOMALIA: Baidoa capture puts pressure on TFG


Medeshi
SOMALIA: Baidoa capture puts pressure on TFG
NAIROBI, 27 January 2009
The fall of Baidoa in south-western Somalia to Al-Shabab, hours after Ethiopian troops left, raises fresh questions about the viability of the Somali government, a civil society analyst said.
Baidoa, seat of the Transitional Federal Government (TFG), fell to the Islamist group on 26 January. A number of people were killed and injured and families displaced.
"The fall of Baidoa calls into question the viability of the TFG," the analyst said. "If they cannot defend the only town under their control, how can they hope to bring the rest of the country under their control?"
Baidoa fell as representatives of the TFG and a faction of the Eritrea-based Alliance for the Re-liberation of Somalia (ARS), led by Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed, met in Djibouti to set up a new parliament and elect a president.
The two groups had in November reached a power-sharing deal to double the size of parliament from the current 275 members to 550 members. The meeting in Djibouti voted to seat the extra MPs, according to Abdirahman Abdishakur, the ARS chief negotiator.
The new MPs, he added, would be sworn in "within a day or two”, while the process of electing a new president would take "no more than a couple of days".
However, a civil society analyst, who requested anonymity because of the volatile situation, posed the question: "Where will the new parliament go?"
The capture of Baidoa would also "bring Mogadishu under new and sustained pressure", he said. "They may not be able to capture Mogadishu, but they will be able to apply pressure."
In the past, the insurgents have captured towns and later abandoned them, but the capture of Baidoa signalled their ability to take advantage of any vacuum and expand their sphere of influence, he said.
The Al-Shabab met little resistance as they entered the town, local residents said. "At around 4:30pm local time yesterday, Al-Shabab forces entered and captured Baidao from the TFG. There was some resistance but not much," Ali, a local resident, told IRIN.
LootingAnother local, who requested anonymity, said the group, which was camping on the outskirts of town, had entered after talks with community leaders and stopped looting.
"There was looting of the presidential compound and two other places but that came to an end as soon they came in," he said. "There has been minimum displacement."
A local journalist told IRIN the group captured but later released senior government officials, including transport minister Mohamed Ibrahim Habsade and Aden Saransoor, another former warlord and deputy director of the central bank.
"They have all left for Wajid where they are expected to fly out of the country," he added.
Baidoa had been one of the few towns in the country completely controlled by the government and its Ethiopian allies, and therefore spared the violence witnessed daily in the capital, Mogadishu.
Somalia has been hard hit by a combination of conflict, drought and hyperinflation, creating a humanitarian crisis.
An estimated 3.5 million people need assistance while more than 16,000 civilians have been killed in the conflict between the Ethiopian-backed government and insurgents over the past two years.
Theme(s): (IRIN) Conflict, (IRIN) Governance, (IRIN)

Somali culture embraced in Minnesota

Medeshi
Somali culture embraced in Minnesota
By: Samantha Bushey
Posted: 1/26/09
The Somali Student Association (SSA) hosted the second annual Somali Night, "I Am Somalia" in Atwood Ballroom Saturday.
In the past, the SSA has teamed up with and participated in Africa night, but decided last year to have a separate night devoted to the Somali culture. (Many cultural dances were performed entirely by women on Saturday at Somali Night. Women danced the Buraanbur with Raxmo Ruuxi singing live.)
The night was full of informational videos, cultural dances, poetry, songs and a fashion show.
"This is just to celebrate the Somali culture," president of the SSA, Zamzam Mumin said. "We want to give a full night to educate them (St. Cloud residents and SCSU students)."
In order to enlighten as many people in the St. Cloud community as possible about the Somali culture, the SSA invited the Boys and Girls Club and gave them free tickets for the event.
The night started with a short video giving general information about Somalia, then went into the Somali Anthem followed by a presentation by Abdikariim about unsung heroes of Somalia.
The four unsung heroes talked about were Ahmad Ibrihim Khazi, Mohammed Abdullah Hassan, Hawo Osman and the Somali Youth League that started in 1943 and was Somalia's first political party.
"They laid the foundations for today," Abdikariim said.
After the Buraanbur dance, performed by 12 women while Raxmo Ruuxi sang, came a "History of Somalia" video that went more in depth with information about Somalia including information about its tribes and civil war. (Traditional Somali food was dished up Saturday night at the "I am Somali" culture night in the Atwood Ballroom)
In introducing Khalid Adam with his poetry, Abdimalik said, "I hope you enjoy it because we are the land of poets."
The poem "Duality" was written and recited by Adam. "The sun pulsed red hot vulva… oh the things they did to survive, to live complete… as you dismiss this experience… this is the Somali experience whether you like it or not… we are the ultimate test of endurance… we are the duality that encompasses humanity."
When dinner was served, the audience formed a line on each side of the ballroom, and members of the SSA served everyone the variety of dishes. If someone did not get in line for food, a member of SSA would bring them a plate of food so they could get the full Somali experience. ( sample of the food served at the Somali culture night.)
Having the full Somali experience sometimes made it hard to know what was going on because, "They are using mostly their language so it's kind of difficult," Ram Maharjan, SCSU student, said.
Maharjan thought it would have been easier if they had the English words on the screen during the songs and all parts of the narration when they were not speaking English.
At the end of one of the cultural dances, the Dhiisow, performed by five men and five women, one of the dancers stepped forward and shouted, "We are the Somali. I am Somalia."
When the executive board of SSA went on stage, they thanked Multicultural Student Services and Student Government Association for their help with putting together the second annual Somali Night and Mumin said, "Hopefully we can get more of your support in the future and it will be an endless tradition."

© Copyright 2009 University Chronicle

Defeated Ethiopia pulls its troops from Somalia

Medeshi Jan 25, 2009
Defeated Ethiopia pulls its troops from Somalia
Ethiopia said Sunday it has withdrawn all its troops from Somalia, two years after the soldiers were deployed to prop up Somalia's transitional government.
The troops arrived in the Ethiopian border town of Dollow on Saturday and were greeted warmly by residents and officials there, the country's defense ministry told CNN.
As troops withdrew from around the Somali capital, Mogadishu, last week, forces from different Islamist groups -- including the hard-line Al-Shabab, which the United States has designated a terror organization -- took control of bases the Ethiopians abandoned.
"The city is almost under Islamist rule," said a local journalist who did not want his name revealed. "You can hear different names of the Islamist groups taking control in many parts of the city."
Ethiopia invaded Somalia in December 2006 to reinstall a U.N.-backed transitional government in Mogadishu after a hardline Islamist group overtook the capital and seized power.
Ethiopia's invasion had the blessing of the United States, which accused the Islamic Courts Union -- which captured Mogadishu earlier that year -- of harboring fugitives from al Qaeda.
The Islamists responded with a guerrilla campaign against government and Ethiopian troops. Efforts to replace the Ethiopians with an African Union -led peacekeeping mission faltered as the violence worsened, and heavy fighting in Mogadishu and other cities drove hundreds of thousands from their homes.
The lawlessness also spilled onto the seas off the Horn of Africa, where international vessels are routinely hijacked by pirates, suspected to be Somali, who demand large ransoms. And the transitional government was wracked by a power struggle between Prime Minister Nur Hassan Hussein and President Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed, who resigned in December.
Ahmed attempted to fire Hussein for being ineffective. But Hussein said the president did not have the power to fire him, and the vast majority of members of parliament backed Hussein in a vote of confidence.
Hussein said last week that he would run for president, and lawmakers were expected to meet this week.
Ethiopia Defeated
by Abdishakur Jowhar M.D
The Ethiopians came bristling with the hardware of modern warfare. They came looking like Rambo with black stripes painted on black faces. They came brimming with pride, arrogance and the foolishness of man. They let lose their goons on the populace and harvested death and destruction. They emptied the Capital City of its people and made it the exclusive domain of rapid dogs, occupying armies and the barely human dogs-of-war. They watched with glee as Somalis engaged in their national sport of ethnic cleansing one sub-clan at a time and their number one hired help parked himself in Villa Somalia and took on the grizzly task with the enthusiasm of Rwanda's Interahamwe. And in the meantime the Ethiopian occupation force began to wash its soiled feet in the salty water of the Indian Ocean, to satisfy its centuries worth of longing and hoping and scheming for an access to the seas. Mogadishu once rehabilitated by the short lived moderate Islamic Courts became the new killing fields of Africa-the unfortunate.

Oh time! Two short years, full of glory and sacrifice. And the Ethiopians find them self exhausted, broke, demoralized, dragging their dead, leaving, claiming "success" and well, in short defeated. Defeated by al- Shabaab - the spear head of the Resistance. Zenawi, we may ask, who is laughing now? Who is cocky now? Victory to the people! Glory be to be Allah (SWT). Yes to Al-shabaab; I who have been most vehemently opposed to them, find myself no choice but to rejoice with Shebaab today for they have conclusively demonstrated to the Somali people that their mortal enemy could be defeated.

An Unclenched Fist : How Obama can bring stability to Somalia


Medeshi Jan 25, 2009
An Unclenched Fist
Barack Obama has a unique opportunity to bring something resembling stability to Africa's Horn.
Scott Johnson
NEWSWEEK
From the magazine issue dated Feb 2, 2009
As a state, Somalia has racked up more failures than any other on the planet. So said Susan Rice, soon to be Barack Obama's United Nations ambassador, in a Brookings Institution report she coauthored last year. Since then, Somalia's troubles have only worsened: 1.3 million internally displaced people roam the country scavenging for food; the president quit last month; and hard-line Islamist militias, having already taken control of Somalia's south and central regions, now stand poised to tighten their grip on the capital, Mogadishu. Some 10,000 innocent civilians have been killed since January 2007, pirates are terrorizing the coasts, and last month Somalia entered its 19th year without a functioning government. In many ways, Somalia is hardly a state at all.
But as a foreign-policy initiative, Somalia's problems offer Obama a unique chance to sketch a bold path forward in the region. After the Bush administration backed the Ethiopian invasion in 2006, helping to overthrow the moderate Islamic Courts Union, Somalia descended into war, and the Bush policy radicalized an ever-larger portion of the population. But Obama, whose world view embraces the idea of talking to one's enemies, could shift course on this policy failure and increase stability by re-engaging with the Islamists, and in particular with the young fighters who make up the ranks of al-Shabab, the Islamists who have been gaining strength over the last two years and continue to drag Somalia further into chaos.
The window of opportunity for Obama is small and fragile. But two things have happened in Somalia that could make the task easier. First, the hated Ethiopian occupation of Somalia that fueled the growth of al-Shabab is over. Second, Abdullah Yusuf resigned in December as president, paving the way for more moderate and inclusive figures to have greater say. Still, Obama's policy prescriptions would have to be specific, but not overstated. He could temporarily suspend U.S military C-130 flights over Somalia, now a near-constant presence, thereby sending a message that a future policy will not have as its central piece a military component that alienates the very people America needs to bring to the table. Obama could also consider suspending al-Shabab from the terror list temporarily to prove that, as he said in his inaugural speech, America will hold out its hand if its enemies "unclench their fists." A third path would be to open back-channel negotiations with as many hard-line factions as necessary to bring them into talks. Key to any strategy would be a quiet outreach effort to Sheik Hassan Dahir Aweys, considered the father of Somalia's Islamist movement and likely sufficiently powerful to bring enough radicals to heel to make any diplomacy worthwhile. Finally, as Rice hinted in her confirmation hearings, America needs to begin to fashion a regional approach that would address the longstanding border dispute between Ethiopia and Eritrea as part of any move to end Somalia's isolation.
It won't be easy. Al-Shabab poses urgent security concerns to the United States and many of Somalia's neighbors. Some of the group's hard-line leaders have connections to Al Qaeda. More worryingly, Somalia has started to attract American jihadists, including several from Minnesota who traveled there recently to fight. An unknown number may still be training in Shabab training camps in the south, and it's unclear whether their long-term goals lie in Somalia or back in Minnesota. Yet Obama, already beset by doubts about his Muslim heritage, isn't likely to make conciliatory talks with Islamists in Africa his first move. "He would be walking into a trap if he did anything that could lead to charges of being soft on terror," says Sally Healy, a Somalia expert at Chatham House.
But the potential rewards of such a strategy are tantalizing. The Bush administration made a policy out of talking to its enemies in Iraq, including many who had killed American soldiers, and as a result Iraq is calmer and more stable. With two wars already on his plate, Obama would do well to quell a rising storm in Africa's Horn, and the sooner the radicals are tamed, the less likely it is that they'll continue to splinter into the kinds of factions that could eventually return Somalia to the days when warlords ruled the streets. The alternative to engagement, says Rashid Abdi of the International Crisis Group's Somalia team, is that "by the end of the year, we could be talking about over 100 armed groups in Somalia." A further descent into warlordism is likely only to help the spread of radical Islam in the region. So while few doubt that a strategy of engaging with the Islamists could be risky, for Somalia and the rest of the Horn the riskiest option may also be the best.

With Jason McLure in Addis Ababa

Young Somalis Recruited for Jihad?

Medeshi Jan 25, 2009
Recruited For Jihad?
About 20 young Somali-American men in Minneapolis have recently vanished.
Dan Ephron and Mark Hosenball
NEWSWEEK
From the magazine issue dated Feb 2, 2009
It didn't trouble Burhan Hassan's mother that her son had been spending more time at the Abubakar As-Saddique Islamic Center, Minneapolis's largest mosque. A 17-year-old senior at Roosevelt High, Hassan and his family had fled civil war in Somalia when he was a toddler. Some of the other Somali immigrants in the Cedar-Riverside housing project where he lived got drawn into gangs with names like Murda Squad and Somali Mafia. But Hassan was getting good grades and talking about going to college, says his uncle Abdirizak Bihi. When the boy didn't come home from school on Nov. 4, his family assumed he was at the mosque. By evening, his mother had searched his room and found his laptop was gone and clothes were missing. (Photo: Sheik Abdirahman Ahmed, of the Abubakar As-Saddique Islamic Center, in Minneapolis )Later, she discovered his passport had been taken from a drawer she kept locked. "That's when we realized something serious had happened," says Bihi.
Hassan, his family later found out, had boarded a chain of connecting flights to Amsterdam and Nairobi and a boat to Kismaayo in Somalia. The city is a stronghold of al-Shabab, which is one of the country's most hard-line jihadist groups and has close ties to Al Qaeda. He traveled with at least two and up to five other young Somali-Americans from Minneapolis, according to others in the community and law-enforcement officials. Within a day, Hassan phoned home to report he was safe—but when probed, he said he couldn't divulge more and hung up. The call and the circumstances of his sudden disappearance led his family to suspect the worst—that Hassan had somehow been persuaded to join Islamic militants fighting for control of the lawless country.
That suspicion is now shared by counterterrorism officials and the FBI, who are probing whether al-Shabab or other Somali Islamic groups are actively recruiting in a few cities across the United States. The officials say as many as 20 Somali-Americans between the ages of 17 and 27 have left their Minneapolis homes in the past 18 months under suspicious circumstances. Their investigation deepened when one of the missing men, Minnesotan Shirwa Ahmed, blew himself up alongside other suicide bombers in Somalia last October, killing dozens of al-Shabab's political opponents and civilians. Ahmed had also prayed at Abubakar, and within weeks the FBI put the imam of the mosque, Sheik Abdirahman Ahmed, on a no-fly list. Among the questions investigators are asking: Who persuaded the young men to go? Who paid for their flights? And what role, if any, has the mosque played in their alleged recruitment?
Since al-Shabab is on the State Department's list of terrorist organizations, traveling to Somalia to train or fight with the group is illegal. But security officials involved in the investigation have a bigger concern—that a jihadist group able to enlist U.S. nationals to fight abroad might also be able to persuade Somali-Americans to act as sleeper agents here in the United States. Al-Shabab has no history of targeting the U.S. But the group has grown closer to Al Qaeda since the American-backed invasion of Somalia by Ethiopia in 2006. Al-Shabab has since been working with a number of non-Somali operatives wanted by the United States, including Fazul Abdullah Mohammed, an architect of the 1998 attacks on the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, according to intelligence officials.
As if to underscore the danger, early last week the FBI and Department of Homeland Security warned in a bulletin for the first time that al-Shabab might try to carry out an attack in America—timed to disrupt the presidential inauguration. A government official, who asked for anonymity discussing sensitive intelligence, tells NEWSWEEK the information came from an informant who notified security officials that people affiliated with al-Shabab might already be here. The tip-off proved to be a false alarm. Still, security officials view the bulletin and the disappearances in Minnesota as a warning that Somalia's brew of lawlessness and radicalism might rebound on the United States. "You have to ask yourself, how long is it before one of these guys comes back here and blows himself up?" says a senior U.S. counterterrorism official, who also wouldn't be quoted on the record discussing intel.
Hassan, like several of the other boys who have gone missing, was raised by a single mother; his father was killed in an accident before the family immigrated. The morning after his disappearance, his family searched for him at hospitals in Minneapolis and then went to the police. Osman Ahmed, another of Hassan's uncles, says by then at least two other Somali families had complained to police that their children had not come home. (The Minneapolis Police Department referred NEWSWEEK to the FBI, which would provide only general information.) In a search of one of the missing boys' rooms, family members found an itinerary issued by a Minneapolis travel agency.
The itinerary, obtained by NEWSWEEK, lists two other travelers in addition to Burhan Hassan and charts a punishing five-leg journey to Mogadishu departing Nov. 1 (the reservations were later changed to Nov. 4). The document is significant because it suggests sophisticated planning. Instead of leaving Minneapolis on the same plane, each young man was to travel alone—one to Chicago and two to Boston on separate flights. The counterterrorism official familiar with the investigation says the staggered departures could be evidence of terrorist "tradecraft." Financing of the trips has also raised suspicions. The multiple flights would have cost at least $2,000 for each traveler and were probably paid for in cash. Osman Ahmed says his nephew had no job and could not have accessed such a large sum.
The disappearances have focused unwanted attention on Abubakar and sown tensions within the community. To date, no one has produced evidence that recruiting was underway at any mosque in the city. But several of the young men who left their homes attended prayers and youth programs at Abubakar, and some family members and community organizers believe there's a connection. The most outspoken of them is Omar Jamal, who runs the Somali Justice Advocacy Center. "Someone at the mosque was getting into the minds of these kids," he says.
Abubakar is wedged between modest single-family homes in a residential neighborhood of Minneapolis. On Fridays, several hundred people gather in the carpeted main hall to pray and hear Imam Abdirahman's sermon; at least 40,000 Somalis live in Minnesota, with the majority concentrated in the Minneapolis–St. Paul area. Though most of the worshipers on a recent Friday appeared to be Somali, the imam delivered his 20-minute sermon first in Arabic, then in English and, finally, in Somali. The topic that day was injustice—more specifically, the injustices Muslims must refrain from committing. The list included suicide. "Don't kill yourself," he exhorted the crowd. "Anyone who does is unfair to himself, and Allah will put him in hellfire."
NEWSWEEK found a small number among those who have worshiped at Abubakar and a recently closed sub-branch known as Imam Shafii Mosque who believed the tone was sometimes extreme. Yusuf Shaba, who writes articles for the Warsan Times, a Somali-English newspaper in Minneapolis, says he and his teenage sons attended a lecture at Imam Shafii Mosque in November by a visiting speaker who had fought in Somalia. His presentation turned into a rant. "He talked about the need for jihad," Shaba says. "He got very emotional." Shaba has since kept his children away.
Imam Abdirahman tells NEWSWEEK that he recalls seeing some of the missing young men at the mosque. But none talked about returning to Somalia. "The youths did not consult their imam, just as they did not consult their elders," he says. He denies that any fighters from Somalia (or other countries) lectured at the mosque, and says Abubakar focuses solely on the community, religion and family: "We give the religious perspective." Asked about the possibility that outsiders might have used the mosque to scout recruits, he says, "Mosques are always open to the public … but I don't know anyone of that kind who recruited [here] or talked to the young men."
The imam says he learned the FBI had placed him on the no-fly list when police at the Minneapolis airport prevented him from traveling to Saudi Arabia in November for the hajj. About the same time, FBI agents began coordinating the return to Minnesota of the remains of Shirwa Ahmed, the young man who blew himself up in Somalia a month earlier. His family buried him at a cemetery in Burnsville, south of Minneapolis. As for Burhan Hassan, his uncle Bihi asks, "How does a child who's been in the U.S. since he was 4 or 5 become convinced to leave his parents and go to war in Somalia?" A number of families across Minneapolis are wondering the same thing.
With Michael Isikoff And Scott Johnson

Qaar ka mid ah Ururada Bulshada Rayidka ah oo walaac ka muujiyay mudo dhaafka golayaasha deegaanada

Annaga oo ah Ururada Bulshada Rayidka ah ee Madaxa-banaan waxaanu si wayn uga walaacsanahay