Actions and inactions by Western governments contribute to
the current events in Somalia
Mohamed Mukhtar Ibrahim
London, UK
E-mail: mohamed323@hotmail.com
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Western governments seem alarmed ever
since the Mogadishu Islamists repulsed the unscrupulous warlords and attempted to project
their authority on Mogadishu and its surrounding areas. The sudden creation of Somali
Contact Group and the surprisingly readiness to revisit the arms embargo against Somalia
evidence this shock. However troubled, it is important to look at how the actions and
inactions of these governments contribute to the current situation that Somalia is in.
Somalia has been hotly debated and
speculated upon since the terrorist attacks in New York and Washington. Some countries,
analysts and journalists consider Somalia as a failed country, which terrorist networks
use as a safe haven. Others regard Somalia as a state dominated by clan-based warring
groups fighting for power and religion is not their main concern. Unfortunately, this
debate seems digression at best. If terrorists can operate where there are strong
governments such America and Europe, it does not demand an intellect to figure out that
international criminals can work where a government is unable to wield its authority. A
report published by International Crisis Group in July 2005 noted, Several Western
countries host larger and more sophisticated jihadi networks [than Somalia]. If
there is an element of extremism in Somalia that does not mean Somalis are all crazed
fanatics. Testifying before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, David Shinn, former
U.S. ambassador to Ethiopia and State Department coordinator for Somalia, said, The
vast majority of Somalis follow a moderate form of Islam and they are highly suspicious of
foreign influence."
A failed country is a matter of great
concern but looking back how Western governments have behaved since September 11, they
have hardly made any meaningful attempts to help Somalis to reintroduce a functioning
government for Somalia. A critic may argue that Somalias problem is for the Somalis
to fix it. That is true, however, as Afghanistan has shown, a failed country is a threat
not only to its own people but can become a threat to the global security. Somalia does
not have a viable government that can exert its authority over its borders and once
trans-national criminals become established in this country, it is easy for them to
infiltrate and expand their operations into other countries in the region.
After America invaded Afghanistan in 2001, it was widely reported that those who were
fleeing from Afghanistan might make their way to Somalia. However, instead of helping
Somalis to have a government that has power over its borders, Western governments chose to
act like a big brother and have stepped up patrols off the Somali coast to watch out any
terrorist trying to enter Somalia. And inside the country, rather than enabling Somalis to
form security apparatus that can reintroduce the rule of law and go after any terrorist
network, Western governments opted for to encourage local allies to set up antiterrorist
task forces in return of foreign aid or political recognition.
That has made Somalia to be at the centre of invisible war mainly covert operations
such as snatching operations. The impact and extent of terrorist activities and
counter-terrorist measures are hard to tell since they are done in secret. The ICG report
observed,
away from the spotlight, a quiet, dirty conflict is being waged in
Somalia: in the rubble-strewn streets of the ruined capital of this state without a
government, Mogadishu, al-Qaeda operatives, jihadi extremists, Ethiopian security services
and Western-backed counter-terrorism networks are engaged in a shadowy and complex contest
waged by intimidation, abduction and assassination.
Western governments seem to have given their tacit approval Somalia to be a place where
Ethiopia and its opponents settle any inherent animosity. How the hostility between
Ethiopia and Eritrea has been exported to Somalia is a case in point. Moreover, the
failure of successive reconciliation conferences present unchallengeable trend. In 2000,
Djibouti held a Somali peace reconciliation conference, known as Arta conference, which
enjoyed the support of Ethiopias opponents. But Ethiopia neither cheered on that
peace process nor welcomed the outcome of that conference, which was the formation of the
Transitional National Government.
In fact, Ethiopia started to undermine the TNG through Somalia Reconciliation and
Reconstruction Council (SRRC), which was built up around a number of warlords and other
faction leaders. The subsequent failure of the TNG led to two years of plodding
negotiations in Kenya and Ethiopias opponents were not happy with the Somali
National Reconciliation Conference in which Ethiopia influence was apparent. In 2004, the
SRRC seemed to have emerged the winner when Abdullahi Yusuf became the president of
Transitional Federal Government. The outcome of Kenya is gasping for air now and it looks
that it is going to follow the same trajectory as the one held in Djibouti since many of
the same dynamics, except the undermining is now coming from Ethiopias rivals, that
were present at the previous government seem to be at play within the current government.
This ungodly approval has enabled Ethiopia and its opponents to invalidate each
others political interests. As a result Somalia is the longest running instance of
state collapse in the history of Africa and has become unnecessary threat to Somalis and
others.
As far as the recent development of Mogadishu is concerned, nothing Western governments
could have done would have forced residents of Mogadishu to support Islamic courts more
than when Western governments chose to bypass the TFG and work with unpopular
Mogadishu-based warlords who flatly repudiated to team up with the interim government
although most of them had been named ministerial positions in the cabinet. In other words,
Western governments have encouraged and probably financed Mogadishu-based warlords, who
were holding the interim government and the society in general as hostage, to form
Alliance for Restoration of Peace and Counter-Terrorism and this was one of the most
caustic actions that Western governments have taken. For the last 16 years, in the eyes of
Somalis, these pitiless warlords have been local terrorists and have subjected untold
distress and adversity on the people. And choosing those callous warlords as an ally
inadvertently put Islamic courts in an advantage position and helped the courts to gain
popular support. However, this does not mean Somalis are extremists but they need peace
and stability like anyone else and if they can get that under a religious authority that
would certainly appeal to them.
Soon after the domination of Mogadishu-based warlords came to brutal end, as a knee jerk
reaction, Western governments have expressed a newfound willingness to revisit the long
delayed arms embargo against Somalia imposed in 1992 suggesting that this move would
enable the government to restore law and order throughout the country. Easing the arms
embargo is a prerequisite for sending peacekeepers to Somalia. This is the same government
that Western governments have been reluctant to work with or even recognise as a
legitimate government. This impulsive reaction will frustrate any peace effort to
reconcile Somalis or it may even trigger off an all out war within the country or within
the region if neighbouring countries are allowed to send peacekeepers to Somalia.
Whatever Western governments did or did not do has already gone to history pages and any
mistakes done cannot be undone. Nevertheless, Somalia is facing a critical time,
therefore, the best course of actions that Western governments can do are two. Firstly,
not to allow regional governments and local groups to massage Western governments
interests until they may be in accord with these various group interests. These actors do
try to misinterpret war on terror in order to further their own agenda. They also know how
to masquerade a local issue as an international issue and entice Western governments
financial and military muscles in order to suppress their rivals. Secondly, to discourage
regional governments to use Somalia as a theatre to mangle each others interests in
order to arrest the prolonged chaos that has enveloped this country since the end of the
cold war.
Mohamed Mukhtar
London
Email: mohamed323@hotmail.com
Previous Articles:
Different views of
the same country
Walking on ice
True patriotism and nationalism
The Verdict: Just Business
Somali graduates are working in non-graduate jobs
Somalia
- Fast-forward 25 years to 2030
Unfair
to demonise all Somalis as crazed fanatics
Carnage in London,
assassination in Mogadishu
Somalis:
Masters of Survival
Writings deserved to be immortal end up having momentary appeal
Waxaad qarsataa wa
ay kugu dul qormaan
2004
year of deportation - 150 people were returned to Somalia
Caught Between Two Continents
When intellectuals are not catalyst for tangible change
Maxaa kala haysta baarlamaanka iyo sharciga?
Yet Another UN
Resolution
Not Arta 2
What culture shock looks like!
A Child From
A Lost Generation
Somalis In Uk Must Make A Difference
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