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In Somalia, Another Government Teetering?

Issue 383

Front Page

News Headlines

David Cameron: Somaliland Is A Model For Somalia And Africa

Somaliland President Calls For International Help In Fighting Piracy

Ethiopia Planning To Mediate Between Somaliland, Puntland Over Disputed Region

Buhoodle Celebrates Somaliland Independence

Road Work In Las Anod

Journalists Trained In Hargeysa

Local and Regional Affairs

Las Anod Celebrates Somaliland Independence

SSCDO And GAVO Offer AIDS Seminar In Erigavo

Parents Meet Education Officials In Borama

Kadhafi Wants Somali Exclusion Zone To Fight Piracy

Mo Farah Aims To Break Dave Moorcroft's British And 5000m Record

‘The Boat Is My Home. I Had To Come Back’

A Press Release Covering Mr Mark Bowden’s Latest Visit To Somaliland

Seeking Alternatives To Charcoal In Somaliland

FBI Watching Somali Muslims In D.C.

Situation Continues To Deteriorate In Mogadishu
Somalia Terrorists Denounce Extended UN Mandate
British And American Fighters Respond To Jihad Call In Somalia

Cargo Plane Crashes at Dire Dawa Airport

Somalia: Ethiopia Has No Plans To Go It Alone

British Envoy: UN Security Council Pledges Financial Support To Somali Gov't

US Anti-Terror Authorities See Western Fighters In Somalia

Bollore Africa Logistics Eye Berbera Port

Editorial

Djibouti's Prevention Of Somaliland Independence Celebration

Editor's Choice

War in Somalia: Protecting Somaliland's Peace Should Be a Priority

Features & Commentary

Somaliland Struggles For Recognition

Somalia: One Week In Hell – Inside The City The World Forgot

For Somalia, Chaos Breeds Religious War

Minorities Missing Out On Top Jobs: Study

Bring Zimbabwe In From The Cold

In Somalia, Another Government Teetering?

Taking The Silk Road To Avoid Recession

Somalia Torn Apart
Somalia Needs Regional Help
Anarchy, Terrorism, and Piracy in Somalia: New Rules of Engagement for the International Community

International News

 

Obama: We Need Two States

The Ghost In The Terror Machine

Survey Finds Most Arabs View President Obama Favorably

Gunmen In Iran Wound 3 At President's Campaign Office

Opinion

Impose Naval Blockade On Somaliland, But Not On Alshabaab Terrorists

Djibouti Is Following The Path Of Somalia

Democracy Requires A Responsible Government

Stop Illegal Fishing In Somaliland

Italians Among Foreign Fighters In Somalia - Reported

A Country For Sale

By Alex Perry

Mogadishu, May 19, 2009 - Just last month, Western donors gathered in Brussels to pledge money to the new Somali government of Sheik Sharif Ahmed, in the hope that he could restore order and put an end to the offshore piracy that has plagued shipping off his country's coastline. But renewed fighting in and around Mogadishu has raised fears that Somalia's 15th government in 18 years is about to fail. Sharif was named President only in January, and it was hoped that as an Islamist committed to restoration of law and order and political dialogue, he might do better than his predecessors at uniting Somalis behind a central administration and bridging the divide between militant Islam and the secular West. That was before the return to Somalia of Sharif's erstwhile Islamist comrade, Sheik Hassan Dahir Aweys.

Sheik Aweys had led the Islamist Courts Union (ICU) with Sharif when it briefly ruled Mogadishu in 2006 and had established the Alliance for the Reliberation of Somalia to expel the Ethiopian troops who had invaded and toppled the Islamists in late 2006. But Aweys brands Sharif a traitor for his more moderate stance and his dependence for security on 3,400 foreign African Union peacekeeping troops. Since Aweys' return a little more than a month ago as head of a new group calling itself Hizbul Islam, hard-line Islamist rebels known as al-Shabaab have made steady gains across the country against forces loyal to Sharif. After some fierce street fighting in Mogadishu last week that killed more than 100, al-Shabaab on Sunday took the town of Jowhar, just north of the capital, and on Monday the nearby town of Mahaday. Sources inside Mogadishu report that Sharif now controls little more than a small patch of territory near the center of the city, although, crucially, his forces also still hold the port. (See pictures of Somali piracy.)

Analysts and observers differ on the extent of peril facing the new government. Mogadishu has not known peace since the demise of the last national government in 1991 — and a period of relative calm during the six months when the ICU controlled the city — and it is plagued by a byzantine maze of miniwars between clan militias that often control as little as a single building. In that context, an eruption of more fighting is often merely a sign that the bloody stalemate continues as usual. A diplomat in Nairobi suggested that while Sharif's forces were short of ammunition, the President was confident he had sufficient forces to survive al-Shabaab's attacks. But others believed there was a real possibility Sharif might be defeated. "He's taking a real beating," said an observer. "We're wondering whether he's going to be pushed into the sea." The BBC reported Tuesday that eyewitnesses in Somalia claimed that Ethiopian troops had re-entered Somalia, just months after their departure, but these claims were vigorously denied by the Ethiopian government. (See pictures of April's dramatic pirate-hostage rescue.)

The fate of Sharif's government is closely tied to efforts to suppress piracy in and around the Gulf of Aden, but Somalia has also long served as a battlefield for regional rivalries. Last week the U.S. accused Eritrea of being behind the latest upsurge in violence in Somalia — the U.N. has previously accused Eritrea of supplying vast amounts of weapons to hard-line Somali Islamists as part of a proxy war against its nemesis Ethiopia, whose intervention in Somalia was backed by the U.S. The Somali Islamists in 2006 declared a jihad against Ethiopia, while the U.S. says al-Shabaab has links to al-Qaeda and is sheltering the surviving member of a cell that bombed U.S. embassies in East Africa in 1998. Osama bin Laden, for his part, has repeatedly backed al-Shabaab, which the U.N. says is reinforced by some 280 to 300 foreign jihadist fighters. Those fighters are attracted both by the chance to live under the strict Shari'a law imposed by the Shabaab and by the opportunity to fight the Americans, who have bombed Islamist forces on several occasions since 2006 and are believed to have undertaken several covert missions on the ground.

The fighting has hampered the relief effort to ease the effects of a punishing drought, meaning that whatever its outcome, the losers will likely be the estimated 3.2 million Somalis dependent on food aid.

Source: The Time



 


 








 
















 

 

 

 


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