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Last year, the people of Somalia caught a glimpse of
tranquility. It was fleeting and certainly not without its violent
interruptions, but the few months of rule under the Union of Islamic Courts
(UIC) is now being called Somalia’s ‘golden era’ by top United Nations officials.
In recent weeks, the area around Mogadishu
has collapsed into a bloodbath that has resulted in the displacement of an
estimated 90,000 individuals, on top of the tens of thousands who
had already fled their homes. Famine is likely and disease and malnourishment
plague the streets. Indeed we may wonder how the ‘golden era’ so quickly
disappeared.
The United States’
role in Somalia has been limited
since the deaths of 18 soldiers in Mogadishu
in 1993. Fearing a public outcry, the Bush Administration has been reluctant to
get involved in Somalia,
despite its alleged breeding ground for terrorism. But when the UIC took over
in the summer of last year, the United
States once again saw reason for military
involvement in the Horn of Africa.
Though the Islamists brought a semblance of normalcy to Mogadishu – the airport re-opened, basic needs were
generally provided for – their status as an extremist movement prompted the United States
to label the UIC a terrorist organization with ties to Al-Qaeda.
Despite a growing influence of the UIC around Mogadishu and the southern part of Somalia, the Transitional Federal Government (supported
by the United States)
remained based in Baidoa, led by Prime Minister Ali Mohammed Ghedi. It was
clear that Ghedi would be incapable of countering the UIC movement in the south
without help from his international partners.
Then in December of 2006, the UIC declared a holy war
against Ethiopia which
prompted a quick reaction from the Ethiopian government, an ally in America’s war
on terror. Utilizing American planes, American satellite technology and American
artillery, Ethiopia launched
an attack on Somalia.
The United States
also pursued its own attacks against al-Qaeda targets in 2007.
Now, months later, experts estimate it would take at least
20,000 peacekeeping troops to stabilize the area around Mogadishu. The African Union managed to
pledge 8,000, only 1,600 of whom have arrived, all Ugandan. On top of the
fighting, Somalia
is now facing the worst crop cycle of the last decade. Thus, with violence and
hunger mounting, the United Nations has termed the situation in Somalia the worst humanitarian catastrophe on
the continent – more severe than the conditions in Darfur.
American involvement in this Somali conflict is far from
benign and as an organization which promotes a more just foreign policy in Africa, AFJN is calling on all stakeholders to tend to
the immediate needs of the Somali people. Those who have been displaced, those
whose crops have dried up, and those who do not have access to their most basic
needs are deserving of immediate aid from the international community.
The people of Somalia have seen their ‘golden era’
come and go on the determination of US-backed Ethiopian forces and a US-backed
transitional government. The UIC was not a terribly legitimate government, it
was accused of committing human rights violations, and it was certainly not
democratic, but the stability it brought to Mogadishu has gone unparalleled under the
Transitional Federal Government. It is unlikely that the UIC could have
maintained such stability in the long run, but they were scarcely given the
chance. As one displaced Somali man said in a recent New York Times article,
“we want the Islamists back… at least we had food.”
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