Naari meel qabow ma leh -- A Somali adage that says
there are no cool corners in hell
Approximately nine months ago, the UN-sponsored peace
conference in Djibouti produced the current president of the Transitional
Federal Government (TFG), Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed.
President Ahmed�s internationally supported unity government
continues to be mired down in internal conflict; a conflict rooted in the 4.5
clan system formula. It is a system that remains the most persistent impediment
to peace, justice and equality, because it promotes, legitimizes and generously
rewards the warlords (and their militias) who for nearly two decades
perpetuated violence and chaos, and tarnished the credibility of the Somali
people and the state.
Within this volatile mix are the president�s former
colleagues who feel profound contempt and a sense of betrayal towards him and
his current allies; allies accused of running with the glory of having defeated
Ethiopia�s brutal forces, which occupied Somalia from December 2006 to January
2009 and humiliated the Somali public. They accuse the president�s camp of
signing agreements without consultation and the consent of all of the Alliance
for Re-liberation of Somalia (ARS) stakeholders.
The Asmara based alliance composed of exiled
parliamentarians, Islamic Courts Union (ICU), and members of the Diaspora is an
alliance that, while it lasted, was a beacon of hope.
The agreement, while applauded by the international
community, has left other groups within the alliance feeling alienated -- especially
the ICU�s military wing (Al-Shabab) who played a crucial role in liberating
Somalia, and through their resilience afforded the ARS the credibility to
negotiate with the world.
Sadly, the ARS has now broken up into multiple groups;
Hisbul Islam, Al-Shabaab, and a third group led by Sheikh Ahmed, president of
the current �unity government.� The breakup has dashed the hope for a peaceful
and truly stable Somalia, for it has multiplied the chaos.
Compounding the alienation was the Bush administration�s
hasty verdict that dismissed Al-Shabab -- embraced by Somalis as homegrown
fighters resisting a brutal occupation -- as a �terrorist� entity, a verdict
that proved to be both deadly and counterproductive for all involved.
Angry and defiant, Al-Shabab, has opted to impose a more
violent, rigid rule over the devastated areas it now controls. Reportedly
instituting the practice of cutting off the hands and the legs of starving
civilians accused of thievery -- a punishment which (under the circumstances)
defies Islamic law.
In addition to the Qur�an, Muslims are taught to follow the
Prophet�s Sunnah and the Sunnah of the rightly guided Rashidite Caliphs (the
first four caliphs to succeed Prophet Mohammed after his passing), one of whom
was Umar ibn Al-Khattab. During his caliphate, Caliph Umar visited a province
within the rapidly growing Muslim society wherein he found a number of
individuals scheduled to have their hands cut off for stealing. Upon inquiry,
he discovered their theft resulted from a prolonged famine in the land, and he
ordered a commutation of their sentences. He concluded that the failure was not
on their part, but rather their society and leadership had failed them.
Disillusioned also are the Diaspora advocacy organizations
which launched a peaceful alliance with their brethren in Somalia during one of
the most difficult periods in Somali history. They are now caught in a dilemma,
victims of the same pitfalls that hindered many before them. It is what some
might call the Kool-Aid syndrome;
intoxicated with the leader instead of being committed to the cause.
Meanwhile, both the number of the internally displaced
persons and civilian starvation levels continue to rise, reaching numbers that
are reminiscent of 1992. Violence has again increased in Mogadishu, as
merciless insurgents take shelter in the epicenter of the civilian
population.
African Mission in Somalia (AMISOM), with the singular
mandate of protecting the government, returns fire with more sophisticated
weaponry and far greater devastation -- all for the sake of protecting a
government that is unable to contain violence beyond a few blocks of Mogadishu
and whose leadership has failed to learn from the mistakes of its predecessor.
Alisha Ryu of Voice of America (VOA) reported, �Bakara
storekeeper Ali saying that the �peacekeepers often respond with indiscriminate
fire, causing many civilian casualties.��
Adding to the complexity of the conflict in Somalia are the
latest reports linking the TFG to the recruitment of young boys, mostly from
refugee camps surrounding Dadaab, such as the Hagadera and Ifo camps in Kenya,
to fight for the government against the insurgents.
Ryu reported that a Somali general, Yusuf Dhumal stated
that 1,500 young men were recruited from Kenya on behalf of the TFG, and were
in a training camp in Kenya to fight alongside the government. This statement
is denied by the governments of Kenya and Somalia, but later reiterated by the
mayor of Gairisa, and one of the leading human rights organizations, Human
Rights Watch.
The mayor of Gairisa, Mohammed Gabow, told Aljazeera, �It�s
very sad for the Kenyan government to take advantage of the joblessness of our
youth and recruit them to fight in a conflict in another country.�
Additionally, Georgette Gagnon, Africa director at Human
Rights Watch, said, �Permitting recruitment of fighters in refugee camps
undermines the very purpose of the camps -- to be a place of refuge from the
conflict. Kenyan authorities need to immediately put a stop to this recruitment
drive targeting Somali refugees.�
Sadly, recruitment of the youth is no stranger to the
Somalis -- Somali Diaspora youth are today chastised for this sort of response
to the call to enlist in the long and arduous struggle against the Ethiopian
occupation. Such recruitment will produce an atmosphere that will ultimately
result in new groups that can be branded as �terrorists� by the powers that be,
just like those before them.
To keep the fading hope from dying, President Ahmed and his
government must find a lasting solution to the persistent violence, never-ending
insurgency, and the imbalanced mandate of AMISOM. After all, good leadership is
not measured by empty words, endless travel and taking shelter behind heavily
guarded buildings, but by the positive and sustainable initiatives implemented
in the interest of a leader�s nation and people.
Sadia
Ali Aden is a freelance writer and an activist whose work has appeared in
various publications.