Issue 384
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Front
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Local
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Editorial |
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Features
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International News
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Opinion |
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by
Gitau Muthuma
Wednesday, June 03, 2009
THE CONTINUING FIGHTING in Mogadishu underlines the daunting task that
faces the newly-elected Somali president, Sheikh Sharif Ahmed.
His election marked a dramatic return for the former head of the Union
of Islamic Courts administration, which controlled most of southern
Somalia for six months in 2006.
He was always seen as the moderate face of the UIC. But winning over the
roughly 500 members of Somalia’s newly expanded parliament seems to have
been the easiest part of his presidency, for he faces daunting
challenges – famine, poverty, chronic insecurity and lawlessness.
The new president needs to navigate a bickering parliament, a hungry
population and meddling neighbours – and, more importantly, to face down
the military threat from al-Shabaab who have denounced his new
administration.
Al-Shabaab have shown no willingness to join the grand coalition between
Sheikh Sharif’s ARS and the remains of the transitional government on
the pretext that foreign forces – African Union peace-keepers – are
still in Somalia.
THEY HAVE SPENT THE LAST TWO years building their military and financial
strength and are now probably the best organised force in southern
Somalia. They, therefore, will be hard to dislodge.
Al-Shabaab have expanded their control over southern Somalia since
taking control of the strategic port of Kismayo late last year. Baidoa,
the town that, until recently, hosted the Transitional Federal
Parliament, is also under their control.
They have also taken total control of Mogadishu except for a two-square
kilometre area comprising the president’s palace, the airport and the
seaport.
Hundreds of foreign fighters affiliated to the al-Qaeda organisation are
also taking part in the battles the government forces are waging against
the Islamist rebels who seek to overthrow it.
In the past few months, a new axis of conflict has opened up in Somalia.
In a definitive shift, fighters from different clans are forming
alliances and battling one another along religious lines.
Moderate Sufi scholars, whose tolerant beliefs have come under attack,
have decided to fight back against al-Shabaab for destroying their
shrines and murdering their imams.
The Sufis, a loosely organised, religious brotherhood, also drawing from
many different clans, had studiously avoided getting involved in
Somalia’s clan battles, until al-Shabaab shot dead several Sufi students
and tore apart Sufi shrines.
It is an Islamist versus Islamist war, and the Sufi scholars are part of
a broader moderate movement that Western nations are counting on to
repel Somalia’s increasingly powerful extremists.
Whether Somalia becomes a terrorist haven and a genuine regional threat
– which is already beginning to happen, with hundreds of heavily armed
foreign jihadists flocking here to fight for al- Shabaab – or whether
this country steadies itself and ends the years of bloodshed, may hinge
on who wins these ideological, sectarian battles.
When the Ethiopians pulled out and the moderate Islamists took the helm
of the internationally recognised transitional government, hopes for
peace were raised. But since then, the verdict on the moderates has been
mixed.
In the past two weeks, al-Shabaab have almost routed government forces
from Mogadishu and Ethiopian troops have once again crossed the border
and are standing by.
If Mogadishu falls, Somalia will be dragged deeper into violence and the
country will fragment even further into warring factions, with radical
Islamists probably on top.
The moderates are holding their own in Somalia’s central region, and the
newly-minted Sufi militia is about the only local group to go toe-to-toe
with al- Shabaab and win.
The part of central Somalia that the Sufis control is not nearly as
strategic as Mogadishu. But the Sufis have achieved what the government
has not: grassroots support from local clans.
MANY SOMALIS SAY THAT THE SUFI version of Islam, which stresses
tolerance, mysticism and a personal relationship with God, is more
congruent with their traditions than the Wahhabi Islam espoused by al-Shabaab,
which calls for separation of the sexes and harsh punishments like
amputations and stonings.
The Sufis have also tapped into an anti-Shabaab backlash against their
reign of terror, which includes assassinations and even beheadings. Al-Shabaab’s
continuation of the war after the Ethiopians left does not make sense to
most Somalis.
The Sufis are loosely allied to the transitional government, which has
promised to rule Somalia with some form of Islamic law. The president,
incidentally, comes from a long line of Sufi clerics.
Many Somalis, however, feel that Sheikh Sharif is making the same
mistake his predecessors made, spending more time soliciting foreign
support than working Mogadishu’s streets to cultivate local allies.
Mr Muthuma works with an international NGO in Mogadishu
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