Issue 387
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International News
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Opinion |
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By Alisha Ryu
Nairobi, June 27, 2009 – Last week, a top Somali government minister was
killed in a suicide bombing claimed by al-Shabab militants opposed to
the government. It was the latest of about a dozen al-Shabab-related
suicide attacks that have rocked Somalia for the past three years. A
professor in the United States has a theory about why suicide bombings
are becoming increasingly common in a country that had never seen one
prior to 2006.
On September 18, 2006, a suicide car bomber rammed his car into a convoy
escorting the president of Somalia's transitional federal government at
the time, Abdullahi Yusuf, in the central town of Baidoa. The Somali
leader was unhurt, but the attack killed his brother and four of his
bodyguards.
The attack took place around the time when President Yusuf and his
U.N.-backed interim government approved neighboring Ethiopia's plan to
amass troops inside Somalia to fight the Islamic Courts Union, a
coalition of moderate and hard-line Islamists who had taken over Somalia
in June of that year.
The suicide bombing in Baidoa was a turning point for Somalia, whose
citizens, up until then, were reluctant to believe that a tactic used by
extremists around the world would be imported to be used against
Somalis.
Professor Robert Pape at the University of Chicago in the United States
has been studying suicide terrorism cases since 1980. He says by
inviting Ethiopian troops to invade Somalia, he believes the Somali
government created an ideal trigger for the country's first suicide
attack.
"From 1980 until the end of 2008, there were nearly 1,800 suicide
terrorist attacks around the world," Pape said. "Ninety-five percent of
those attacks have occurred in a specific context -- that is in the
context of a foreign military occupation of a country. For instance,
before the U.S. invasion in March, 2003, Iraq never experienced a
suicide attack in its history. Since our invasion, this has become the
largest suicide terrorist campaign that we have witnessed."
In late December, 2006, Ethiopia defeated the Islamic Courts Union and
installed the government of Abdullahi Yusuf in its place. A violent
Islamist-led insurgency ensued and Ethiopia kept thousands of troops in
Somalia to prop up the weak government.
Pape says in Somalia, the occupation of troops loyal to a
Christian-dominated government in Addis Ababa, backed by the United
States, was viewed by most ordinary Somalis as a threat to the country's
sovereignty. And it gave al-Shabab, the al-Qaida-linked militant wing of
the Islamic Courts Union, the popular support it needed to recruit,
re-group, and to carry out increasingly deadlier suicide attacks.
"When you have foreign occupiers viewed as having a different religion,
that allows terrorists to paint those occupiers as having a religious
agenda to take control of the government and transform the political and
social institutions against the wishes of the local population," Pape
said.
On October 29th, 2008, five, near-simultaneous suicide bombings shook
northern Somalia - three in the breakaway republic of Somaliland and two
in the semi-autonomous region of Puntland. In the Somaliland capital of
Hargeisa, the presidential palace, the Ethiopian consulate, and the
United Nations Development Program offices were hit. In Bosasso in
Puntland, the targets were the offices of the Puntland Intelligence
Service
Al-Shabab has long accused Somaliland and Puntland of cooperating with
Ethiopia and the United States in efforts to identify militant Islamist
cells and their leaders in the Horn of Africa. Pape says the militants
probably chose suicide bombings because they were the most financially
feasible, simple, and intimidating tactic they could use to pressure
governments in Somalia to sever relations with Ethiopia and the West.
In January, Ethiopia pulled its troops out of Somalia under a
U.N.-sponsored peace deal with a moderate Islamist opposition faction.
The transitional federal government merged with the group to form a new
government led by former Islamist insurgent leader, President Sharif
Sheik Ahmed.
The changes forced al-Shabab and other militants to shift targets. They
are now portraying AMISOM, the African Union peacekeeping force in
Mogadishu, as foreign occupiers and the unity government as a western
puppet. AMISOM troops, Somali troops, and government officials have all
been targeted in suicide attacks in recent months.
A Somali civil society leader, who declined to be identified for
security reasons, says what concerns him is that he believes al-Shabab
leaders are religious zealots, who are continuing to use nationalism as
an excuse to seek new religious recruits and expand the war.
He notes that nearly two decades of conflict in Somalia have deeply
traumatized the country, especially its young people. And many remain
vulnerable to al-Shabab's Salafist/Wahhabist teachings, which extol the
virtues of martyrdom in the name of Islam.
"Even if AMISOM is out of the country and the country is for the Somalis
alone, I do not think al-Shabab will stop these suicide bombings unless
they get what they want," he said. "And what they want is very clear. It
is to rule the country and apply their version of Islamic
interpretation."
The civil society leader says hundreds, perhaps thousands, of foreign
fighters are now believed to be in Somalia to help al-Shabab overthrow
the government.
He says al-Shabab has never explained to the Somali people why AMISOM
troops are considered foreign occupiers but thousands of foreigners
fighting in Somalia are not.
Source: VOA, 24 June 2009
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