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War without end

Issue 304
Front Page
Index
Headlines

Puntland Security Forces Defect To Somaliland

Somaliland Government Proposes New ‘Press Law’ To Gag the Free Press & Take its assets.

Town Youths Surrender Deadly Explosives To Somaliland Officials In Las Anod

Interim Qaran Leaders Released After being Held Overnight in Police Custody

Ethiopia Tightening Grip On Somalia — Or Losing It?

Las Anod Local Authority Begins Cleaning The Town

Dubai World Subsidiary Buys Daallo Airlines In Joint Venture With Founders, Djibouti Government

European parliament calls for war crimes probe in Somalia

War without end

President Abdillahi Yusuf Asked To Clarify Government’s Position On Press Freedom

US Africa command will aid security: general

Somalia: an opening towards the end of the impasse

Regional Affairs

Landmine kills 10 in Somaliland

Somaliland: Police Arrest Officials, Supporters Of QARAN Party

Editorial
Special Report

International News

The 'Great Circle of Crisis': Britain's War Plan Against the American System

Farah Roble Aden & Sean Langan Win The Hard News & Features Awards At The 2007 Rory Peck Awards

Lame Ducks, Lame Hawks?

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

An Auschwitz For Africa

Rumsfeld Kept Bogey Of Terror Alive To Rally Americans For War

Challenges To The Modern Commonwealth

Africa: New Improved Disaster Response Tool

EMU, Somaliland University Hope Exchange Program Fosters Peace

Food for thought

Opinions

Open Letter To Somaliland Finance Minister

Freedom Of Press

To save SHURO-Net is to help promote Human Rights in Somaliland

Viva Ali Gulaid

Free Press: An Integral Part Of A Democratic System

The Detention Of QARAN Leaders

Over Seven Ministries And Two Mayors Apologized, But The Minister Of Sports And Youth Still Denies

Somaliland and the press law


Commentary

Meera Selva
Meera Selva
 

November 15, 2007

There are gun battles being fought in the Bakara market, and the bodies of foreign soldiers are being dragged through the streets of Mogadishu.

In 1992, American troops landed in Somalia under the absurdly optimistic Operation Restore Hope, to rescue Somalia from famine and rule by warlords. It ended as one of the most botched interventions the UN and the US have ever carried out. Hundreds of Somalis were killed in the fighting and American soldiers, UN troops and western journalists were murdered by lynch mobs.

Fifteen years later, an imperfect peace deal, belligerent neighbours and American fear of Islamic rule has plunged Somalia into another vicious war and no one seems willing or able to find a solution. In 2004, a protracted set of peace talks in various Kenyan hotels led to the creation of a Transitional Federal Government (TFG) headed by Abdullahi Yusuf.

Most Somalis were wary of the TFG from the start. It was made up of various warlords who had grown powerful in war and, crucially, Yusuf did not command the loyalty of the clans that control Mogadishu, Somalia's violent, unstable capital city. In fact, he spent months outlining reasons why he should not base the seat of government there. While he dithered, the Islamic Courts Union (ICU), a group of Muslim scholars and fighters, gained the support of the Mogadishu residents by meting out their own justice to robbers, drug addicts and kidnappers. In the absence of any kind of police force, they were seen as the only ones who could bring a level of stability to Mogadishu.

Last year, they capitalised on this support and seized control of Mogadishu. The aftermath has destroyed any stability Somalia has enjoyed in the last two decades. After the ICU came to power, America encouraged Ethiopia to invade and reinstall the TFG and shore up Yusuf's position. Ethiopia, which has its own problems with its own Somali rebel group, the Ogaden National Liberation Front, grabbed the chance to carry out its own military manoeuvres within Somalia. When it sent troops into Mogadishu, the Ethiopian government promised its troops would be out in a few weeks. Months later they are still there, fighting gun battles with the Islamists, who have now turned to guerrilla warfare. Both sides are attacking civilians, looting private property and making no distinction between military and civilian targets when placing people under house arrest.

The humanitarian situation in Mogadishu is dire. Over half the residents have fled to camps outside the city, and the ones that do remain have no access to medicines. The few clinics that have managed to remain open are overwhelmed treating those injured in the fighting. The UN said that there are now 850,000 displaced people in Somalia - it is overtaking Darfur as the worst humanitarian crisis in Africa.

The presence of foreign troops with no clear mandate, playing one clan off another is a recipe for disaster in Somalia. Ethiopian and Eritrea are using Somalia's instability to fight a proxy war against each other and Abdullahi Yusuf has no support among the people he is meant to govern. The international community is too nervous to launch a full-scale intervention but it should be forcing Ethiopia to either impose an impartial peace on Somalia or withdraw and wait for another solution to present itself.

Source: Guardian


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