Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Malawi: President Banda Dogged by Cash-gate and Demands of Re-Election

During Nelson Mandela’s burial ceremony, Malawi President, Joyce Banda, received a standing ovation from foreign dignitaries and the South African audience. She eulogized Mandela and called him “a great reformer.”


A prophet, it is said, is not respected in his home country.

Back in Malawi, Banda is a besieged and bruised leader who has been engulfed by a string of corruption allegations. She came to power last year when President Bingu wa Mutharika, a man who had attempted to fire her from her position as vice president, suddenly died of a heart failure. She became the first female president of Malawi and the second female president in the entire continent of Africa. Banda won accolades and international recognition as she spearheaded a campaign against graft. She sold her government jet, slashed her salary by half, and regained the confidence and the support of Western donors. Her predecessor had denounced foreign donors for meddling in the affairs of the country and trying to topple his regime. He simply told them to “go to hell.” In contrast, Banda courted the donor countries and they rewarded her by releasing frozen aid.

The influential American money magazine Forbes named Banda “the most powerful woman in the world.” Time magazine, not to be outdone, listed her as one of the most influential 100 people on the planet. Banda’s memorable stand against the Sudanese president, Omar al-Bashir, a fugitive of the international court, earned her widespread commendation from the West; she refused to host the African Union’s annual summit if al-Bashir attended.

Recently, the pendulum has swung to the other extreme and the once-lauded Banda has become a politician reviled for her failings. She has become embroiled in a corruption scandal aptly called Cash-gate. Government coffers have been systematically looted by civil servants. A priest of Malawi’s Catholic Church recently called Banda the “greatest thief in the world.” In testimony before the Parliament, Peter Chinoko of the Catholic Commission for Justice and Peace (CCJP) accused President Banda of being “part and parcel” of the Cash-gate scandal. The genesis of the scandal, according to Chinoko, was an attempt by Banda and her supporters to raise funds for the upcoming elections that will take place in May.

The most damning report regarding corruption in Malawi was issued last month by a UK-based Malawian attorney and former presidential legal advisor, Z. Allan Ntata, tersely titled “License to Loot.” The 67-page report is a disparaging assessment of a presidential leadership in which endemic corruption is the norm, not the exception. Speaking in absolute terms, Ntata called the Cash-gate scandal “the biggest fraud case ever recorded in the country.” According to Ntata, corruption is perpetrated by the executive branch and there is an elaborate and deliberate scheme to cover it up. The following are examples of this corruption:

1. An accountant in Banda’s office, Frank Mwanza, authorized a payment of $3 million to a ghost firm.

2. In a police raid, a junior government official, who makes about $100 per month, was found in possession of $25,000.

3. Patrick Sithole, an account assistant in the Ministry of Environment and Climate Change, was arrested in possession of an equivalent of $310,000 in various currencies.

4. Fourteen government officials have been arrested in relation to the Cash-gate scandal.

5. Three months ago, nine police officers were convicted of fraud involving $164,000.

6. The budget director of the finance ministry was shot three times in dubious circumstances to uncover juicy details of the Cash-gate scandal.

Banda issued a curt denial of the allegations of corruption and portrayed herself as a victim of insidious innuendo. In an interview with Al-Jazeerah TV, she tried to obfuscate: “We have not failed [fighting corruption].” Banda shifted the blame to her predecessors by saying that the problems of graft started 15 years earlier. She has refused to declare her own assets or appoint an independent commission to investigate corruption. Currently, all the entities investigating graft—including the Anti-Corruption Bureau, the Financial Intelligence Unit, and the police—report to the president. In October, Banda dismissed her cabinet and then re-instated it save for four ministers.

Western donors have frozen their aid to Malawi, which constitutes 40% of the government’s budget, until February 2014 when the International Monetary Fund will conclude its review. Banda, however, seems unruffled. In an interview with the UK’s Telegraph, she dismissively pointed out that it was not the first time that Western donors had walked away from Malawi. “They [donors] come and go and come and go but we are here, we did not die,” she scoffed.

President Banda is not the first African leader who has become the darling of the international community while at the same time being vilified at home. This bifurcation of trying to appeal to two different yet mutually exclusive audiences is taxing. The Western donations are badly needed and, in many cases, are the key pillars that sustain a developing country like Malawi. However, other domestic factors need to be considered if an African leader like Banda is to survive politically. One drawback of being an international icon is that the status does not necessarily translate into actual votes at home. Banda has been saying the right things to Western donors about fighting corruption and instituting measures of austerity. However, when all is said and done, she is a politician who is concerned about re-election. Staying in power in a semi-democratic country may involve patronage and the greasing of palms. In other words, it involves a set of rules and practices that may not be acceptable in the countries that provide aid. It is, perhaps, this dilemma of reconciling one’s international standing and the reality of politics at home that is haunting President Banda.

(Reprinted with permission from African Arguments).

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

12 Years in Somali Prison: The Forgotten Senegalese Prisoner


Abdullahi Jama, 60, is a Somali professional in Seattle, Washington. He is a man of medium height who has legal training and is multi-lingual. He speaks Italian, English, Russian, and, of course, Somali fluently. He is a walking encyclopedia having witnessed the historical events of Somalia. He was born in the 1950s in what is now the Somali region of Ethiopia but grew up in Mogadishu.
He was sent to several European countries for officer training and law courses and later reached the rank of colonel in the army. He worked in various government ministries, including a stint in the president’s office under the Siad Barre regime. Amazingly, Jama knows who is who in Somali politics and can regale one with tales from his various sojourns in government.

However, one incident has left a bad taste in his mouth. “It was a scalding moment of embarrassment for the government,” he said. The unusual encounter with a foreigner left a lasting impact on both men. Jama told me he only remembers his first name.
Abdisalam, a young Senegalese freelance writer, came to Mogadishu in 1976 to interview the country’s officials and people.  He was vibrantly intelligent, gregarious, and demonstrated princely manners. Abdisalam was excited to write about Somalia, then an African regime that had adopted socialism. He visited Ethiopia first, and then came to Somalia through Djibouti. Somalia, during that period of heightened ideological fervor and rhetoric, harbored anti-West sentiments, and the officials were suspicious of foreigners. The fear was that some of these foreign visitors were under cover spies commissioned by the American CIA or European governments. As was the custom, Abdisalam was questioned by agents of the Somali National Security, better known by its Italian acronym of NSS.

Abdisalam was a man of mystery to the secret police. He was Senegalese by birth, but his mother was Gambian, thus making him a man of dual nationality. He had visited an arch enemy of Somalia (Ethiopia) and—most damning of all—he was a roving journalist. Somalia’s dictatorial regime did not allow room for free press or give foreign journalists the opportunity to roam the country.

The secret police were at a loss of what to do: They opened a case file on Abdisalam and took him straight to Laanta Buur, a notorious prison 40 kilometers south of Mogadishu. Abdisalam was confused, helpless, and petrified. He was in an alien country and had lost his freedom. He felt that his life was in utter shambles.  No one told him why he was in prison.
That was 1976.

Twelve years later, in 1988, something odd happened. Colonel Jama and Abdisalam came face to face for the first time. Jama was asked to inspect Laanta Buur prison. He was talking to inmates when someone tapped on his shoulder and asked, “Excuse me sir, do you speak English?”
Jama answered, “Yes."

Jama did not expect to encounter a foreign inmate among the Somali prisoners. Moreover, to the officer, Abdisalam did not stand out: A black man, lean-built, and haggard-looking. “Can you help me?” the foreigner requested. “I have been in prison for 12 years and no one has told me why.”
Jama conferred with the man on the side to learn his story. Upon hearing the man’s ordeal, Jama’s face contorted in pain. The Senegalese man seemed oddly relaxed for someone whose life had been taken from him. Jama wondered how this man had spent 12 years in a prison without anyone charging him with a crime or checking on his welfare. It was stunning news that drew incredulous stares. Gasps of disbelief echoed in the corridors of the prison administration. Abdisalam himself could not provide an adequate answer about his presence in the prison. Jama first notified his boss, General Ismail Ismail, the head of the country’s prison bureau. Jama then contacted the NSS to inquire about the man’s case. To his astonishment, the Senegalese man’s file was bare and nothing seemed out of the ordinary. There was neither an ongoing investigation nor a closed one, a case of purgatory coming early, only no one knew Abdisalam’s sins.

Furthermore, there had been no entries since the foreigner’s initial arrival date in the country. This was a serious matter and a ghastly tale. Intelligence officers are paid to be suspicious, but this was a case of smart people making elementary mistakes. No one had followed up on the case for 12 years.
President Siad Barre was immediately informed. Barre was shocked and asked for more information about Abdisalam.

The secret agents went through Abdisalam’s luggage and made a discovery, one that turned the case upside down. The Senegalese man had written laudable articles about Barre and his socialist-leaning government.  Some of the clippings of his writings were worn out, others torn, but there was no iota of doubt that the writer was progressive in his ideas and supportive of the regime. Barre ordered Abdisalam released and he was taken to Shabelle Hotel. The International Red Cross was immediately contacted to locate the man’s family. Jama told this writer that the government apologized profusely to Abdisalam and gave him $20,000 in cash as compensation for his ill-treatment. He left the country in 1988. His important message to Somalia was one left unsaid: “I have survived.”
The president of International Red Cross was pleased with Jama and his hard work of doing all the legwork in the process of releasing Abdisalam. Jama received an award from the international organization. “This is the best job recognition and award I have ever received,” said Jama. That, however, did not provide solace for how badly he felt about the case. ”It is the saddest incidence that I ever witnessed in my long civil service career,” he added.
Sometime in 1988, Abdisalam contacted members of the Somali government and told them he wanted to visit Somalia again. It was not clear whether his request was a sign of Stockholm syndrome—a psychological condition in which one develops positive feelings toward his captor— or whether Abdisalam was  seeking closure to his harrowing ordeal. He was politely advised not to come to Somalia due to the political turmoil the country was experiencing. “No one has heard from him since,” said Jama. “I wonder what he is doing now.”

Like a camera revealing an image, Abdisalam’s case exposed a web of incompetence, cruelty, and a broken system of injustice and accountability. The case was a tale of sadness and tragedy. No one was blamed for the string of catastrophic errors. Jama makes no excuses: “The Somali government messed up, big time,” he laments.
(Reprinted with permission from Sahan Journal, December 11, 2013).

Thursday, November 21, 2013

Crossing Swords: Siad Barre and Professor Said S. Samatar

 You have to know the past to understand the present.”—Carl Sagan

 
It was either in 1984 or 1985 that Siad Barre’s regime was weakening. It was a period not far removed from Somalia’s war with Ethiopia in 1977/1978, a tragic miscalculation by President Barre. Perhaps the aftermath of that costly war is what led to the beginning of the disintegration of the Somali state. A BBC Somali service reporter interviewed Said S. Samatar, then an assistant professor of history at Rutgers University (USA) about the current Somali politics. Samatar, a blunt-spoken man with an air of cynicism, criticized the authoritarian tendencies of Barre and went even further when he mentioned that he had recently met a relative of his in London who was a Somali government official.  According to Professor Samatar, the official was less than optimistic about Barre’s regime, but when another Somali official approached the two his relative was suddenly effusive in his praise of the government. Samatar was mystified by his relative’s change of course. In the BBC interview, Samatar did not mention the name of his relative but, through the process of elimination, it could have been no one but Khalif Muse Samatar, a Leelkase deputy minister. Khalif was at the time the only Leelkase cabinet member in Barre’s government. He later denied being the source of Professor’s Samatar’s story.

Barre was furious with both the BBC and Samatar. The next day, he went to the Academy of Arts and Science in Mogadishu and told the scholars there that they were basically useless and worth nothing. “A young scholar in the U.S. by the name of Said S. Samatar is reigning in the mass media and is being interviewed by the international media while you sit around here,” Barre admonished, according to a member of the Academy who was present in that meeting. Then, Barre went on Radio Mogadishu and blasted Professor Samatar again. This time the dictator’s attack was vicious and personal. “He comes from a small group and a religious family, but this is the same man who had changed his religion [from Islam to Christianity],” Barre said.

Samatar’s kinsmen, the Leelkase, are known to be religious. His father was an Islamic magistrate in Ethiopia even though Samatar did not grow up with him. Samatar was raised in the rural area in what is now the Somali region in Ethiopia. At age 12 or 14, Samatar decided to look for his father and asked a man to help him locate the old man. The two traveled from town to town until they reached Qalafo. They came upon a group of elderly men playing shax (Somali chess) and the guide told the young Samatar, “There is your father.” It was a bizarre spectacle: a lad meeting his unassuming father for the first time. However, young Samatar recognized his father instantly because he was a carbon copy of his brother Ismail.  
“Father,” the young Samatar called. The elderly man addressed the young man in a generic way without knowing his identity: “Son, if you have a legal problem, why don’t you come to the office tomorrow.” Obviously, Samatar realized that his father did not recognize him.

“You are my father,” said Samatar.
“Ah, what wife?” asked Sheikh Samatar.

“[So and so].”
“And what is your name?”

“Said.”
“Ah, there was such a child.”

Then, Samatar, for the first time, started going to Qur’an school. His father also encouraged him to attend a learning center run by Sudan Interior Mission (SIM) in Qalafo in Ethiopia. Many years later, Professor Samatar would call his father “a bit of a coward” because the elder Samatar was an Islamic judge and supposedly a pious man but who nevertheless worked for what Professor Samatar called the “Ethiopian Christian system.” Samatar’s father also had the habit of defending Ethiopian Emperor Haile Selassie and his government. Moreover, his father encouraged young Samatar to seek knowledge from the missionaries and use “Taqiya”—a Shi’ite doctrine in which the believer practices something and conceals his true intention. In other words, Samatar’s father was asking his son to associate himself with the missionaries out of educational pragmatism. Young Samatar did exactly that and joined the missionaries. Incidentally, another young man, a contemporary of Samatar in Qalafo, by the name of Nuraddin Farah (who later became a renowned international writer) studied at the missionary school but did not dabble in the religion his teachers proselytized. Samatar studied at the missionary schools, met his future wife, an American, and married; he worked with the missionaries and finally won scholarship to the U.S. The winners of such scholarship were interestingly dubbed “The Believers Group.” In an interview in 2005 with Professor Ahmed I. Samatar (no relation) for Bildhaan (Vol. 6, 2006), Professor Samatar remarked that he had gone “from one kitab (book) to another. And now I am returning to the original kitab.”
After the BBC interview with Samatar, Barre went into battle mode. The dictator indirectly pointed out the size of Samatar’s clan and his family’s religious background, but he dropped a blitzkrieg bombshell when he mentioned Samatar’s embrace of Christianity. It was a staggering revelation for many of the Somalis who regularly listened to the BBC. There was no doubt that Samatar came from an Islamic religious background as was manifested by his father’s profession as an Islamic judge, not to mention that the young Samatar studied and memorized the Qur’an. Barre’s indirect mention of the size of the Leelkase clan also was not accidental. It was obvious that Barre was not happy with the conduct of Khalif Muse Samatar, the only high-ranking Leelkase official in his cabinet. Professor Samatar, in an article in Wardheernews (“A Leelkase Captain Ahab, April 7, 2005), wrote that, in fact, his Leelkase clan was “largely a clan of mullahs with no material or numerical significance.” Whether these remarks were written in jest or resignation, Samatar added, “I daresay my kinsmen are likely to disown me for saying this.”

Barre’s aim was to discredit Samatar by letting Somalis know that the young scholar had ‘betrayed’ his own religion, and hence turned his back on his family and his clan’s stellar religious credentials. In essence, to Barre, Samatar had no credibility. The BBC called Samatar again and asked him about Barre’s remarks. Samatar did not dignify them with a response. Then, he was asked about Barre’s potential successors. Professor Samatar argued that the bigger tribes (the Hawiye and the Darod) were obviously vying for Barre’s position but that Vice-President General Mohamed Ali Samantar, who came from a smaller tribe, was more likely to replace the dictator as a transitional figure. However, the professor interestingly pointed out that General Samantar might out-maneuver and out-fox the other contenders from bigger families. Then, the professor astutely mentioned that in Kenya, when the strongman Jomo Kenyatta died, the Kikuyu and the Luo politicians jostled for power but, in a compromise, settled on Vice-President Daniel arap Moi of the smaller Kalenjin tribe:  Moi outmaneuvered all of them and would stay in power for 24 years.
In 1977, while collecting research materials for his dissertation about Sayid Mohamed Abdille Hassan’s poetry, Said Samatar briefly spent time in Barre’s jails and the censors confiscated his research materials because they contained poems full of clan references. In the 1970s, Barre’s regime had waged war on tribalism and, hence, clan references were frowned upon. It was Dr. Mohamed Adan Shaikh, a Somali cabinet member, who ordered Samatar’s release and the return of his research materials.

Siad Barre is long gone; he passed away in the 1990s in Nigeria. Samatar is still teaching history and sees the dictator leaving a legacy of destruction. In the interview with Bildhaan, Samatar depicted Barre as a dictator who could have built a nation in the 21 years he was at the helm, but instead “he went out to undermine, to destroy.” Samatar grudgingly depicted Barre as “an evil genius who knew our weaknesses as a people…our greed, our excitability, and our vanity.” Furthermore, according to Samatar, Barre “inflamed group against group, kin against kin, until we just went ballistic, crazy.”
Somewhere in Gedo, Somalia, Siad Barre is turning in his grave and probably saying his trademark remark about his political opponents in the Somali Salvation Democratic Front: “Waxaan ilaahay ka baryayaa inuu soo hanuuniyo kuwa gidaarrada ku qufaca,” (I ask God to guide those who linger around street corners [pontificating]).

Thursday, October 24, 2013

Can Women Train Their Husbands?

There is a nagging question that many women often ask themselves. How do they train their husbands?  In a world where the rate of divorce is equal to the rate of marriages, any fresh ideas or techniques that can salvage marriages becomes enticing.

Two books—one new and the other old—deal with this issue of training husbands. Angela Christian Pope’s How To Train Your Husband (September 5, 2013) is short, concise and to the point. She offers practical recommendations to help women cope with their husbands and illicit from them the positive responses that will make their marriages better. Amy Sutherland’s book, What Shamu Taught Me About Life, Love and Marriage (2007), is unique because the author uses animal training techniques to train what she calls “that stubborn but lovable species, the American husband.”

Pope acknowledges that not all husbands and wives are the same of course, but many do share common traits. She then makes a bold statement, one that sums up the needs of that complex male creature we call a husband: “Other than love, which everyone needs, the two biggest things most men need in life are respect and sex.” If only women would understand that simple fact, their lives would be a lot easier. Simply put, according to Pope, men are biologically and inherently “wired for” for these needs. While many men would find this characterization of them very simplistic (alas, whatever happened to men’s obsession with male comradeship, sports, and power?), Pope interjects her expertise to bolster her claim. Other than her educational credentials, which include degrees in psychology and education, she has also counseled many couples. Still, her biggest accomplishment is the fact that she was once in a volatile marriage that lasted for 16 years and then later experienced and survived a bitter divorce. She has since been happily married again. In other words, she has seen it all—what works in marriage and what does not.
Training husbands is no easy task because men bring into their marriages some long entrenched behaviors. Interestingly, Pope also delivers a cautionary note for women: You can’t train your husbands unless you are willing to train yourself. In fact, the author makes it clear that what men do is generally react to what women do. She gives some general pointers to women as part of her husband-training:

1.      Avoid criticizing your husband in public and especially in front of the children. Such scathing criticism will “tear a man like nothing.”

2.      If you have to fight, do so fairly. That means no name-calling. There are certain words one has to avoid like “never” and “always.” Accusing your husband by saying he ‘never’ cleans or is ‘always’ late will make him defensive and unwilling to change.

3.      Don’t act like you are fine when in fact you are angry with him. Tell him why you are upset with him, but in a calm way.

4.      In terms of intimacy, avoid always having a headache. Men are not dumb and they know when they are being rejected with untenable excuses.

5.      Don’t play games with your husband because being honest is the best policy.

6.      Compliment him as much as you can. These acts of appreciation, indeed, will strengthen your relationship. In other words, don’t ever take him for granted.

7.      Keep your private life private. While it is a good idea to have a special friend whom you can confide in, it is always better not to divulge your marital secrets to others. Keeping your husband’s secrets is also paramount because it is a matter of trust.

Pope adds other recommendations as well such as making all important decisions together, praising him, showing your love instead of simply saying ‘I love you’ and never using sex as a weapon because if you do that, he will see you as “the enemy” instead of the object of his affection.” And finally, men need their personal space, so let him have guy time.
While Pope’s advice might seem paradoxically geared to making men happy, she in fact deals with the subject of training husbands as a kind of team work that can occur between couples. Tellingly, what is good for the goose is good for the gander. When the author tells women to respect their husbands, she also makes it clear that wives must also be respected in return; respect is never a-one-way-street.

Amy Sutherland’s book is a bit controversial because her techniques will raise some eyebrows. Sutherland was already an accomplished writer and the author of a bestseller, Kicked, Bitten, and Scratched: Life and Lessons at the World’s Premier School for Exotic Animal Trainers (2006) when she wrote an interesting article (the most viewed and e-mailed piece in the New York Times in the year 2006), called “What Shamu taught me about life, love and marriage.” Her book bears the same title.
According to Sutherland, “the key to marital bliss is to ignore negative habits and reward positive ones, the same approach animal trainers use to get killer whales to leap from their tanks, and elephants to stand on their heads.” Animal trainers use a method called the Least Reinforcing Scenario (LRS) which is: You reward the behavior you like and ignore the one you disapprove of. When a trainer notices a dolphin has done something wrong, he stands still for a few seconds without looking at the animal in the eye, and then he returns to the work. The idea is that any response from the trainer, either positive or negative, “fuels a behavior” but if an unacceptable behavior does not provoke any response that behavior simply dies out.

While Sutherland admits that her animal training technique is neither original nor a quick fix, she is adamant that the approach works for both genders.  
Sutherland was leading what seemed to be a happy life. Her loving husband, Scott, had many good traits but she was annoyed by his habits of constantly losing his keys and then bugging her about their whereabouts, leaving his dirty laundry on the floor, putting empty milk cartons back in the refrigerator, coming late to dinner appointments as she waited for him in restaurants, and crowding her in the kitchen as she cooked. Her concern was; how to deal with Scott’s annoying habits and free her marriage from these irritants. While researching her first book, she thought of adopting the techniques animal trainers use. Sutherland began to ignore Scott’s nagging questions about finding his keys; she started giving him snacks to munch in the living room while she prepared for dinner, and rewarded him by complimenting him every time he placed his dirty clothes in the hamper.

Her technique did work, and her marriage, in her own words, became “far smoother, her husband much easier to love.” She realized that her habit of taking his negative traits personally had been counter-productive. As the animal trainers’ motto says, “It is never the animal’s fault.”  She added, “The more positive I was with my husband, or more importantly, the less critical I was, the faster his husbandly defensiveness faded away.” When Sutherland asked her husband to do something, he responded positively. “He seemed at ease,” she noted, “maybe in a way he hadn’t before, he begun to trust me.”
Humans have the habit of not noticing good deeds and instead focusing on only the negative habits. For instance, parents do not notice the times when their children are riding in the car peacefully, but when one makes a mistake, there is an urgent need to dwell on that negative behavior. Husbands are also not noticed for all the good things they do for their family, argues Sutherland, but when one does not take out the garbage, all hell breaks loose.

When Sutherland says the technique works for both genders, she is right. One day, she went to the dentist and had crown work. For a week, she was in excruciating pain and kept complaining to Scott about her physical condition. Then, she noticed that her husband was quiet and kept listening to her as she whined without uttering a word. Suddenly, she realized what was going on. “Are you giving me an L.R.S? [i.e ignoring my constant whining] You are, aren’t you,” she asked. Scott smiled. It became evident to her that he was training her, the American wife. The phrase “Did you just shamu me?” became her husband’s typical response when he felt subjected to Sutherland ’tactics.  
 Sutherland implies that we are all animals but men are different animals than women animals. While humans are more complicated than other animals, there are universal “rules of behavior” that indeed “cut across all species.”

Husband training conjures up the notion that women have all the answers for making their marriages work better. Why is it that only women have to work harder than their husbands to make their marriages successful? Why do men need to be trained? As a rule, a trainer has the knowledge and the information a trainee lacks, but the two cited authors here see husband training as more of an effort to educate women about the simplicity of men’s needs and the predictability of male behavior. In reality, men are neither dogs nor dolphins who simply respond to certain stimuli. The trainer method of reinforcing the positive and ignoring the negative, however, is very effective in learning. But men are more complex specis than animals because animals don’t react to power the same way that humans often do. Animals see their trainers as their masters; humans don’t see others that way. Moreover, men are of course capable of training their trainer.
(Written by Hassan M. Abukar and reprinted with permission from Sahan Journal, 10/24/2013) 

Friday, October 4, 2013

Two Myths about Al-Shabaab You Probably Didn't Know

During the last few months, al-Shabaab, the al-Qaeda-affiliated Somali group, has shattered some of the misconceptions many have about the critical underpinnings of the group’s activities.  Indeed, some writers, including myself, have made assumptions about the militant group that are simply wrong. Two myths stand out.

1. Al-Shabaab is divided into two factions: Global jihadists and local nationalists

The recent discord among al-Shabaab leadership, especially evident in the bloody incident in Barawe in June 2013, resulted in two founders of the group being killed, Ibrahim al-Afghani and Moalim Burhan, while Hassan Dahir Aweys fell into the hands of the Somali government.

Al-Afghani, was an internationalist jihadi. Other leaders like Aweys, Mukhtar Robow, and Moalim Burhan, were considered to be more local leaders than global jihadists. In addition, two foreign jihadists — Osama al-Britani, a British citizen of Pakistani origin, and the American-born Omar Hammami, also known as Abu Mansoor al-Amriki — were killed in September 2013  by loyalists of Ahmed Godane, the supreme leader of al-Shabaab.

The two foreigners, al-Britani and al-Amriki, had impeccable credentials as global warriors. The nagging question is: Why would Godane, a man who is known for his commitment to global jihad, eliminate a group of fighters comprising global and national jihadists?

The answer is simple: The conflict among al-Shabaab leaders is not about whether to wage global jihad. It is mostly about personal rule — namely Godane’s unbridled pursuit of total hegemony over the radical group.  In the end, the larger question about al-Shabaab boils down to not only about global jihad or ideology, but rather is a simple issue of command and control.

2. Al-Shabaab is more lethal and effective now more than ever

We are told that al-Shabaab is ever cohesive and united, as demonstrated by the terror group’s recent bombings in Mogadishu, and the attack on the Westgate mall in the Kenyan capital Nairobi.

Yes, al-Shabaab was effective and daring in these bombings, but one has to ask what enabled all these operations to take place in the first place?

In Somalia, the radical group has gotten a rare opportunity in the government of President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, whose security apparatus is weak and corrupt.

A year ago, Mogadishu was a lot safer than it is today. According to a recent UN Monitoring Group report, al-Shabaab has infiltrated Mohamud’s administration especially the security and intelligence sectors.

A good illustration is the escape of al-Shabaab member Abdirahman Ali Abukar on September 10 from Mogadishu’s central prison. The fugitive was arrested last year for plotting to kill the country’s deputy head of the national army.  The Somali government has since arrested the prison warden and four correction officers for possibly being bribed by the militant.

This means that as long as the Somali government is corrupt and ineffective, there will be room for al-Shabaab to operate at will. This also means that al-Shabaab is not becoming more cohesive; rather it is a reflection of the government’s inadequacy. Any security lapse in the government is a boon for al-Shabaab.

The attack on Westgate Mall in Nairobi was unique because of the preponderance of foreign jihadists in the operation.

If some of the reports are right, the language of communication among the attackers was English, which means that Godane has finally employed a division of labor tactic for his fighters: using foreigners and foreign-born jihadists for operations outside Somalia, and Somali-born fighters for operations within the country.

This division of labor appeases foreign jihadists who have been clamoring for some action for a while.

In short, al-Shabaab’s recent attacks can best be described as opportunities in security lapses and a strong commitment to remain relevant.

These bombings are cries from the militant group to be noticed once again, to distract its fighters from the horrific killings of some of its own leaders and foreign jihadists, and take the limelight away from Somali President Mohamud’s recent diplomatic successes.

By Hassan M. Abukar. The article is reprinted with permission from Sahan Journal.

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

To Beat Al-Shabaab Kenya must expel its religious leader 'Sheikh Hassaan' from Nairobi

Over the last 2 years, Kenya has been one of few years successful in militarily engaging Al-Shabaab and, in fact, expelling the Al-Qaeda affiliate group from Kismayo, Somalia’s third largest city. However, the Kenyan government has been tolerating the presence of a young Somali-Kenyan radical cleric by the name of Hassan Mahad Omar AKA Hassaan Hussein Adam “Abu Salman” who is considered the unofficial mufti (a religious scholar who interprets the sharia) of Al-Shabaab.

“Sheikh Hassaan,” as he is popularly known, is not your typical cleric who teaches basic religious doctrine. He is well-educated and has a degree from an Islamic university in Saudi Arabia. He is 34 years old, articulate, sharp, and a man with a mission. He is, for all practical purposes, a scholar who does not shy away from urging his followers to wage jihad. On July 28, 2011, the United Nations Security Council Committee put Sheikh Hassaan on its sanctions list for “engaging in acts that threaten the peace, security or stability of Somalia.” Moreover, the committee accused the young cleric of acts ranging from recruitment for Al-Shabaab and fund-raising for the group to issuing fatwas that call for attacks on the Somali government. Sheikh Hassaan does not carry arms himself but instead provides the religious justification for Al-Shabaab’s heinous crimes. He is highly celebrated in websites sympathetic to the militant group.

Sheikh Hassaan has drawn the ire of Somalia’s religious establishment. In July 2012, a group of 22 Somali scholars met in Nairobi and issued a fatwa of their own, condemning the young radical as a heretic and calling on the Somalis to boycott his books and lectures.

The recent bloody discord in Al-Shabaab’s leadership saw two founders of the group killed by loyalists of the emir of the group, Ahmed Abdi Godane. Others, like Hassan Dahir Aweys and Mukhtar Robow, fled for their lives. Such actions were justified by a fatwa of Sheikh Hassaan, who said that those who create conflict among the mujahidin in Somalia should be killed. Al-Shabaab officials still use that fatwa as the religious justification for liquidating their detractors in the movement.

In 2011, the Kenyan government arrested and held Sheikh Hassaan for a few days but then released him without explanation. It is not clear why the young cleric, whose lectures are widely distributed among Somali jihadists across the globe, was let go. Some say that he is being protected by highly influential Kenyan- Somali politicians who, like Shaikh Hassaan, belong to the Darord-Ogaden clan. Others argue that, perhaps, the young cleric is so popular among Somali jihadists that his arrest might create more problems for the already over-stretched and poorly run Kenyan security forces. One thing is clear: The young cleric is mostly engaged in inciting violence and preaching jihadi ideology among his admirers who in turn direct it against the Somali government.

The Kenyan government has yet to understand that Al-Shabaab’s terrorist attacks in both Somalia and Kenya, like the recent killings in the Westgate Mall of Nairobi, are not born out of a vacuum. They are based, directly or indirectly, on fatwas issued by the group’s de facto mufti, Shaikh Hassan, from the comfort of his home in Nairobi.
 
By Hassan M. Abukar, a freelance writer and political analyst.

(Reprinted with permission from African Arguments, September 25, 2013).


Thursday, September 12, 2013

Omar Hammami: The Rise and Fall of a Foreign Jihadist

“History has proven that the Somalis generally do not want any influence from Al-Qaeda or foreigners in their internal affairs.”—Omar Hammami.


                                                             ***

Omar Hammami, the American jihadist with Al-Shabab, Somalia’s Al-Qaeda affiliate, was killed on Thursday by Al-Shabab fighters according to a report by AP. He was 29 years old. He had been hunted by Godane, the emir of Al-Shabab and his henchmen for over a year and half. It was only on April 25 when he tweeted that an Al-Shabab assassin shot him in the neck.

Born and raised in Daphne, Alabama, to a Syrian father and an American Baptist mother, Hammami grew up in a privileged life. He was raised as a Christian because his father was not a practicing Muslim. As a child, Hammami won awards in Sunday school. Only in his teens when the father became interested in Islam did the son become Muslim. In high school, Hammami became, in his own words, a Salafi, an individual with a literal and puritanical approach to Islam. He started dressing in a certain way and grew a big beard. His father, who by that time had become the head of the Islamic center in their hometown, was not pleased with the path his son had chosen. Hammami fit the typical profile of a confused young man with an identity crisis: He dropped out of school, had toxic relationships with his parents, had difficulty keeping a steady job, and fantasized about a future far removed from reality. Hammami’s discord with his father led to his expulsion from the family home. It became apparent that his father’s lofty expectation of Hammami becoming a doctor was never going to materialize.

Hammami held an assortment of low-wage jobs in Alabama such as counselor at the local YMCA and janitor in the very mosque of which his father was president. He did not have a lot going for him in Alabama and moved to Toronto, Canada. Once again, he worked in odd jobs such as delivering milk to Somali refugees. He met a young Somali woman and they married. The couple moved to Egypt so that Hammami could pursue a degree in Islamic studies at the prestigious Al-Azhar University. However, the young husband, and now father, was restless. He was itching to go to a Muslim country where a jihad was being waged. Somalia was an alluring prospect because in that year of 2006 the country was run by the Union of the Islamic Courts. Hammami took a flight to the United Arab Emirates without informing his wife and from there he went to Somalia. He wanted to be a martyr and ended up abandoning his wife and their infant daughter in an alien country. Hammami never saw his wife and daughter again. The couple divorced because the young wife did not want to return to Somalia, the very country she and her family had fled in the early 1990s.

Hammami found in Somalia young jihadists, some foreigners, who were in the midst of what they called ‘jihad’ against the Ethiopian troops and the Somali government forces. He felt at home and received training in guerilla warfare. In 2007, a federal warrant for his arrest was issued in the U.S.

It was a tough life for the American living in Somalia because he was in a place seemingly resigned to absolute poverty. He remained ensconced with fellow jihadists in the jungle and, at times, in small villages with no modern amenities. Food was scarce; ants were plenty and a nuisance, lions bellowed nearby, and Ethiopian army helicopters, first, and American drones, later, hovered in the skies looking for the militants. All these challenges did not frazzle Hammami: He wanted to die for the sake of God. But the young man, at the time 22, had a habit of sticking his neck out to question military strategies and criticize policies. In his 127-page autobiography that he posted online in 2012, aptly titled “American Jihadist,” Hammami stated that he was constantly labeled as a “virus” and “a trouble maker” bent on challenging authority. When some disgruntled foreign fighters decided to leave Somalia, Hammami stuck around. He saw his future in that African country. The leaders of the Al-Shabab militant group he joined in 2007 were impressed with his enthusiasm, loyalty, wry sense of humor, and his fluency in English and Arabic. Most of all, he was a white man who could make strides in recruiting young Muslims in the West. Hammami relished being a recruiter and mouthpiece for the radical group. His videos were occasionally funny and entertaining: A villainous figure that did not appear villainous on the internet.

But, then, Hammami was not one to stay quiet. He had a penchant for making trouble.

Last March, 2012, Hammami appeared on the internet claiming that Al-Shabab militants were trying to kill him because he disagreed with the group regarding the application of sharia, strategy, and the course of jihad in Somalia. The Al-Shabab leaders were not pleased with the public rants. After several months of tolerating Hammami’s “childish petulance,” the group lashed out at him and accused him of seeking fame at the expense of his fellow jihadists. It was also in that month of December 2012 that Hammami was added to the FBI’s Most Wanted list.

On April 25, 2013, an Al-Shabab assassin shot Hammami in the neck. It was not a critical injury. However, it became clear that Godane, the emir of Al-Shabab, was not letting any internal opposition to his leadership go unpunished.
Hammami was not your typical jihadi. He had a sense of humor and he employed a unique technique in appealing to would-be jihadists in the West. He sang jihadi rap songs and relished in taunting the U.S and members of the Somali government. In a way, despite his radical ideology, he was goofy. “I would also lead [fighters] in singing Nashids [Islamic songs] in an obnoxious loud voice while other people were sleeping or doing ‘serious’ things. I would also go on long passionate rants about everything that was wrong with our situation and then end it all rolling in laughter like a deranged hyena,” he said in a sardonic self-mocking way. When asked if he would ever return to America; why or why not— he replied: “The “why not” would have to be Eric Holder [the United States Attorney General], war ships, most wanted pictures, and kangaroo courts.” Hammami, in an interview with VOA two weeks ago, said that a return to Somalia was not an option “unless it was in a body bag.” Moreover, he labeled the American drones in Somalia as “racist” because “they only shoot white people.” He added for good effect, “They just want to kill off every white [fighter] they can.”

Someone had asked Hammami if he had some commonalities with the late Steve Jobs because the two were born to a Syrian father, dropped out of college, and were leaders in their respective fields. Hammami simply answered, “I never knew about him.” Hammami, however, said if given three days in Alabama, he would spend time visiting his mother, father, and sister. “Then,” he continued, “I would like to make the rounds of restaurants and get some Chinese food, some hot wings, some Nestle ice cream, some gourmet coffee, and a slew of other foods and beverages.” It is now obvious such opportunity will never come along.

Hammami’s old colleagues in the Al-Shabab group did not laugh when he started making snide remarks about Godane, the adroit manipulator and punitive leader. Godane was furious and vowed to flail the young American fighter.

Omar Hammami’s jihadist career was a nexus of religion, bravado, and self-promotion. He will best be remembered as the hip hop jihadist who ran afoul of Al-Shabab, a terrorist outfit that has never deviated from its mission to kill and maim. Jihad, as Hammami used to say, is not fun, but instead is a serious and dangerous enterprise. He was right. His death is the best confirmation.

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Somali-American Promotes Better Turkish-Somali Relations

Ahmedei Cheikgurei is both mad and ecstatic about recent events in Somalia. He is mad because of last month’s suicide bombing in Mogadishu in which Al-Shabaab terrorists attacked the Turkish embassy. One Turkish security officer was killed; the perpetrators and half dozen others were wounded. He is ecstatic because, even after this heinous attack, the Turkish government has declared that it would not withdraw from Somalia and cease its humanitarian aid to that country.


“I never doubted that Turkey would stand by Somalia,” said Cheikgurei. “Turkish people are known for their great hospitality, moral virtue, warmth, compassion and humanity.”

Cheikgurei, a Somali-American leader and a top officer of the Turkish-Somali American Friendship Association, is quick to point out that Turkey was the first country that came to Somalia’s rescue during the massive famine in 2011 and that Prime Minister Recep Tayyib Erdogan was the first non-African leader to visit Mogadishu in more than 20 years. He brought the plight of the suffering Somalis to the world’s attention.

Both the Turkish government and the Turkish people have since donated hundreds of millions dollars to Somalia. In 2012 alone, Turkey donated $365 million.

“Turkey is building schools, hospitals, roads, and soccer stadiums, and rehabilitating the main airport, parliament building, and huge markets to spur the economy as well as offering thousands of scholarships to Somali students,” said Cheikgurei.

What separates Turkish aid to Somalia from other relief projects in Somalia is that it is concrete, unique, and observable, remarked Cheikgurei.

“The Turks in Mogadishu drive their own cars, trucks, and heavy equipment,” he said.

In contrast, Cheikgurei said the United Nations (UN) and other international non-government organizations (NGOs), are nestled in the comfort of Nairobi, Kenya, “sipping cappuccino and constantly talking about capacity building and empowerment.”

Cheikgurei sees that “arms-chair” approach to aid as counter-productive.

“How can you build capacity and empower people when you hop on a plane from Nairobi to Mogadishu every once in a while, like a tourist?” he asked.

Ahmedei Cheikgurei is no stranger to Turkey. He lived there in the 1990s and understands the country and its culture. Moreover, he speaks Turkish fluently and occasionally interprets for Turkish officials who visit the Somali communities in the U.S.

Cheikgurei, who holds an advanced degree in organization management and leadership, is also the chief executive officer of the new Global Impact Resource Group (GIRG), an international development company that provides social and humanitarian services.

“My colleagues in GIRG and I aspire to transform Somalia into a twenty-first century nation,” he explained.

Over the past 13 months alone, Cheikgurei has visited Turkey three times. He also visited his hometown, Mogadishu, and met with Somali government officials and Turkish diplomats, engineers, medical doctors, educators, and aid workers.

“Somalia can learn a lot from Turkey, especially how to run the state,” said Cheikgurei. “We Somalis are fortunate to have a country like Turkey going out of its way at this juncture of our existence to lend us a helping hand.”

Somalia desperately needs that helping hand. The country has experienced a bloody civil war that has lasted for more than 21 years. Many people have died and the country’s infrastructure has been utterly destroyed. Finally, last fall, Somalia elected a new president, Hassan S. Mohamoud, and the international community has recognized his government.

Mohamoud has publicly acknowledged Turkey’s role in helping Somalia. “The Turkish government is one of our determined and dependable allies,” he said after Al-Shabaab bombed the Turkish embassy in Mogadishu on July 27th of this year. “We have new schools and hospitals because of the [Turks] extraordinary work.”

Somalia needs what Cheikgurei calls the “Turkish model” in development. That model focuses on “needs rather than wish lists [of aid projects] made in European capitals,” he said.

Somalia, according to Cheikgurei, is on the right track in its recovery. “Thanks to friends like Turkey,” he said smiling.

Hassan M. Abukar is a freelance writer and political analyst.

(This article is reprinted with permission from Sahan Journal, September 3, 2013).

Friday, August 30, 2013

Does Wardheernews Perpetuate Stereotyping?


I woke up early Tuesday (August 27) morning and was checking the latest news with my laptop when I saw a flashing headline in Wardheernews titled, “Midgaans and the Ethiopians are fighting for the last Place in Somaliland.” The article was written by Mark Hay and reprinted from Vice. My initial reaction was one of bewilderment. Is this a typo? The word “Midgaan” is a pejorative in Somalia. It is a word used by clannists and the ignorant to refer to a cluster of minority groups. The problem is more acute in the Somaliland region than any other part of Somalia.
The reporter from Vice himself mistakenly wrote that these minority people’s “actual name” is “Midgaan” and that the groups encompass “the Timal (sic), Yibir, Gaboye and other groups.” He also noted the name “double[s] as an insult.”  He added that some “Midgaans” still “see it as a connoting pseudo-slavery in Somali society, where they have traditionally been restricted to ‘unclean’ work like barbering, blacksmithing, infibulation, and leatherwork.”

I am disappointed that a major Somali website like WDN would reprint such a vulgar and tasteless article that demeans an entire community in the name of investigative journalism. It is one thing to cover the plight of a minority group, but insulting them by using the very name that they were given by their oppressors is abominable. A similar example would be writing about the lack of employment opportunities for many African-Americans in inner cities and then debasing them in an article that starts with the “N” word.
I believe that WDN should never have posted the article because of its racist and demeaning title. The piece did not add to our knowledge of what the minority groups face in terms of loss of job opportunities. Last year, WDN posted a TV news clip from the Universal channel that dealt with Daami, a neighborhood in Hargeisa that is inhabited by minority groups. That show was informative and analytical and not a single pejorative word was uttered. This kind of news coverage is what we need, not knee-jerk articles that perpetuate racist labels and symbols.

Each of the minority groups the article mentioned has a real name. The Tumal, the Yibir, and the Madhiban are proud of their names, but they feel insulted when they are called “Midgaan” a pejorative label that connotes a sense of superiority by its user. These minority groups have traditionally performed skills that other Somali nomads could not or did not want to perform. What the writer calls “unclean jobs” (barbering, blacksmithing and leatherwork) are what has sustained Somalia’s economy for hundreds of years. It is ironic that these so-called “menial jobs” are careers highly touted in many parts of the world. What is wrong with barbering, leatherwork, and blacksmithing? It is perhaps only the ignorant who do not appreciate such lines of work. As Abraham Lincoln once said, “There are no menial jobs, only menial attitudes.”

Saturday, August 24, 2013

Is the Somali President in Cahoots with Al-Shabaab?


Recently, former prime minister of Somalia, Ali Khalif Galeyr, accused the Somali government under the leadership of President Hassan S. Mohamoud of having a secret working relationship with Al-Qaeda affiliate Al-Shabaab, especially in regards to the tumultuous region of Jubaland.
In an interview with a Somali channel in Minneapolis, Galeyr claimed that the government has what he called “gacan-saar” (a secret handshake; an understanding between two parties) and that the subject has become a thorny issue between the Western powers such as the United States, the United Kingdom, neighboring countries, and Mogadishu. 

“These dealings between the federal government and Al-Shabaab is what led to the last minute cancellation of President Mohamoud’s invitation to attend the G-8 summit,” said Galeyr.
Galeyr, who is a member of the Somali parliament, lamented about the increasing violence in Mogadishu which he said was worse than the time of former President Shaikh Sharif Shaikh Ahmed. The spike in violence, said Galeyr, has manifested itself in street bombings, suicide missions, and political assassinations, and is due to the fact that the security forces are not organized and disciplined. The problem, he added, is due to the absence of civil service in tact when President Mohamoud came to power last fall. Unlike in other countries where politicians come and go, explained Galeyr, “Somalia has no permanent civil service.”

Galeyr reserved his harshest criticism to President Mohamoud himself for the latter’s incompetence and series of missteps.
“No Somali president has been received in the US and UK, the way this president was,” pointed Galeyr. “In the three days Mohamoud was in the U.S. for official visit, he met President Obama, members of the Congress, the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF).”  

Despite the world recognition accorded to the new Somali government, Galeyr blamed President Mohamoud for squandering such a golden opportunity. The president’s secret relations with Al-Shabaab, contends Galeyr, is the biggest concern some countries have about him. There are “other issues” of concern as well, said Galeyr, but he failed to name them.
Galeyr claimed that there have been secret telephone exchanges between certain figures of Al-Shabaab and government officials that led to some countries question of President Mohamoud’s true intentions of fighting the radical group.

Another problem with the current administration in Mogadishu, said Galeyr, is the absence of experience from the top echelon of the government. “The president, the prime minister, the minister of interior, and the state minister of presidency all have no government experience,” stated Galeyr. “They are there in the government because they have been friends for a long time.”

Galeyr stated that President Mohamoud met him, along with other politicians, long before the appointment of the current prime minister was announced last November. “I have chosen ‘Saacid’ [the nickname of the current prime minister, Abdi Farah Shirdon] because I have known him for a while, and I do not want to repeat the usual power struggle between the president and the prime minister,” the president told the group. Interestingly, Galeyr said, he had talked to PM Shirdon himself about the president’s encroachment of his duties, and the premier did not mind.
“The duty of the president is clearly delineated in the provincial constitution,” clarified Galeyr. “The executive powers are vested in the council of ministers headed by the prime minister but now it is in one hand.”

That hand is the president’s.
Regarding the latest United Nations Monitoring Group report on Somalia, which accused the government of rampant corruption, Galeyr agreed with the findings. “It is the job of the parliament to investigate these allegations and question the finance minister and the governor of the central bank,” admitted Galeyr, “but so far nothing has been done.” The reason, according to Galeyr, is the fact that the presidency and the leadership of the parliament, under speaker Mohamed Osman Jawari, are in cahoots with each other. The parliament is being run from Villa Somalia, the seat of the presidency, added Galeyr.

Speaker Jawari and President Mohamoud long before they were elected, according to Galeyr, were against the ratification of the current provisional constitution. “Interestingly, the two were elected based on the very constitution that they are violating today.”
On Somaliland, Galeyr accused its president, Ahmed Mohamed Mohamoud Silanyo, of orchestrating a campaign of repression and violence against the people of the Khatumo region. Galeyr extolled the accomplishments of the Khatumo state and said it had brought awareness to its people, young and old, from New Zealand to Minneapolis.

In the interview, Galeyr admitted that he had gotten most of his inside information about the Somali government in Nairobi than in Mogadishu.  Nairobi hosts hundreds of former Somali politicians, wannabe leaders, and amateur political speculators. Authentic news, rumors, and innuendos flow there like a stream of water.  
Galeyr was critical of the provincial constitution last year before it was ratified and the administration of then-President Sharif. However, in this interview, he portrayed Sharif’s administration as more equipped to better deal with the threat of Al-Shabaab. “The Al-Shabaab militants are now bombing Villa Somalia,” said Galeyr, something that the terror group did not do during Sharif’s regime on a regular basis.
 
Only two months ago, Galeyr was the nucleus of five politicians which included three former prime ministers who visited former President Sharif in his home in Uganda. The government in Mogadishu had accused the group of attempting to stage an anti-government coalition to topple the regime.  
Recently, Ali Mohamed Ghedi, another former prime minister, has lambasted at President Mohamoud for trampling on the provisional constitution, sowing discord among Somali clans and communities, failing to avert the continuous violence in Mogadishu, and creating unnecessary doubts about federalism. “The regime in Mogadishu has strayed from the correct path,” said Ghedi.
The reaction of Mogadishu to Galeyr’s recent allegations was swift. A spokesman for the Somali government condemned Galeyr for his “baseless” allegations of a government and Al-Shabaab alliance. “Galeyr has to bring clear evidence or he needs to apologize,” said the spokesman.

The link for the interview is here and it is in Somali
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aekYGBGkwPU

 

Thursday, August 8, 2013

Naming and Shaming: The Latest UN Report on Somalia


The French were right.
As their adage goes, “Plus ca change, plus c’est la meme change,” (The more things change, the more they stay the same).

Three weeks ago, the United Nations Monitoring Group on Somalia and Eritrea released an exhaustive report that was reviled by some and lionized by others.  The main theme of the report is simple: Not much has changed in the way Somalia is governed.
The arms flow to Somalia continues as usual and is facilitated by almost everybody, from rogue states to countries in good standing with the UN.  The other major salient points of the report include:  Corruption is rampant and piracy is a lesser threat but former pirates have made a career change, radicalism is still a threat to the country but the menace is not exclusively from ideology, charcoal is a black gold that is illegally exported despite an international ban, and, of course, “spoilers” always erect obstacles to the pursuit of peace and stability.
 
President Hassan S. Mohamoud came to power last fall promising change, stability, and accountability. Many Somalis and the international community were relieved that finally Somalia had a new leadership that would, skillfully and honestly, tackle the plethora of problems the country faced. Maintaining security, eradicating the Al-Shabaab terrorist group, stopping piracy, and reconstructing the country after 22 years of civil war and anarchy were the main issues for the new administration. President Mohamoud’s government gained international recognition and many countries promised to help in his efforts. Persistently, the president talked about the need for foreign donors to fund his government directly instead of having the United Nations administer aid.

Corruption
The UN Monitoring Group report begins with a stark indictment of the new Somali government. “Despite the change in leadership in Mogadishu,” says the report, “the misappropriation of public resources continues in line with past practices.” Some of the manifestations of this corruption are the following:

a)      On average, about 80 percent of the withdrawals from the country’s Central Bank (CB) are made—not to run the government—but for private purposes.  The CB has become, in a way, an ATM for certain public officials, or as the report calls it a “slush fund” A case in point, of $16.9 million transferred to the CB for government use, $12 million cannot be accounted for. 

b)      The monthly revenue from the port of Mogadishu is about $3.8 million; however, from August 2012 to March 2013, only $2.7 million was deposited in the bank. The report further explains that “at present, at least 33 percent of the monthly port revenues cannot be accounted for.”

c)      The immigration services charge a lot of money to issue passports and visas, but rarely are all the proceeds deposited in the bank. There is a great deal of fraud and embezzlement. Needless to say, an individual may never know if his traveling documents are authentic or fraudulent.  

The UN report blames the country’s leaders for the widespread corruption, but it singles out Abdusalam Omer, the Somali-American governor of the Central Bank, for being “the key” to the bank’s irregularities. Omer, oddly, runs the bank without the benefit of a board. The report even adds a zinger when it brings up Omer’s checkered past. Once upon a time, Omer was the chief of staff of the mayor’s office in Washington, D.C.  The report claims that Omer was forced out from this high profile position.  The Central Bank has issued a preliminary response to these allegations.

Piracy
Somalia, once a bastion for piracy, has experienced a decline in ship hijackings. You might wonder what happened to most of the pirate leaders.  The UN report has the answer: “To date, neither Mogadishu nor Puntland has seriously prosecuted and jailed any senior pirate leaders, financiers, negotiators, or facilitators.” Some former pirates have become security guards for the unlicensed foreign ships illegally fishing on Somali waters. Pirates have always blamed these foreign ships for their own criminal acts of piracy. Now, the pirates have undergone a career change and are joining their arch enemies. Security protection in the high seas has become a booming business in Puntland validating the notion, “if you can’t beat them, join them.”

Al-Shabaab
“At present,” the report states, “Al-Shabaab remains the principal threat to peace and security in Somalia.” The Al-Qaeda affiliate has not abated its suicide attacks in Mogadishu. The group has been weakened by internal discord among its leaders, but is still a force to reckon with. Why? It is because the terror group has not engaged in a direct battle with the forces of the African Mission in Somalia (AMISOM) and, hence, has retained its core fighters. This enables the group to easily recapture the towns that Ethiopian forces had withdrawn from or abandoned. “These takeovers,” the report argues, “illustrates not only the inability of the Federal Government of Somalia and its associated militias to control any ground without international support, but also the capacity of Al-Shabaab to readily recover lost territory.” Moreover, the terror group has infiltrated the government and especially the intelligence services. Warlords and politicians enable the militant group to wreak havoc in Mogadishu.  These enablers are not necessarily religious figures but instead are either persons tribally tied to Al-Shabaab leaders or pure mercenaries.   

A good example is what happened in Mogadishu last week when Al-Shabaab suicide bombers attacked the Turkish embassy annex. The Turkish ambassador to Somalia said that the attack was “outsourced” to Al-Shabaab. “The Al-Shabaab organization may have been used as ‘subcontractor’ in this attack,” he told the Turkish news agency Anadolu. Mogadishu Mayor, Mohamed Ahmed Nur “Tarzan” also railed about “some politicians” for aiding and abetting the radical group in the commission of its heinous crimes. At times, in Somalia, it is difficult to tell where religious radicalism begins and clan loyalty ends.
The Al-Shabaab the terror group is not the only entity responsible for most of the political assassinations in Mogadishu. The UN report said that some warlords and even a senior government official like General Gaafow—head of the immigration services—run hit squads. The going rate is $200 per head and $25 for conducting surveillance. This explains why these crimes are never prosecuted. At least, Al-Shabaab takes full responsibility for its killings. But then, how does one know if the job was “outsourced” to the terror group or not?

Charcoal
The UN Security Council had banned the exportation of charcoal from Somalia primarily because Al-Shabaab was then in control of Kismayo, Somalia’s third largest port city, and was profiting from its sale. No one cared about the devastating impact the related deforestation was having on the country. In 2012, Kenyan forces captured Kismayo, along with a Somali militia group. However, the transport of charcoal not only continued but increased 147 percent. Al-Shabaab, which controls the port city of Barawe, is also exporting the black gold. “About 1 million sacks of charcoal are exported from Kismayo each month,” the report says. If the current rate continues, warns the report, “charcoal exports in 2012-2013 will consume some 10.5 million trees and the area of deforestation will cover 1,750 square kilometers, which is larger than the city of Houston, Texas, in the United States.”

For the record, the Somali government has denounced the UN Monitoring Group report as being based on rumors and innuendos. “It is clear that the report is increasingly dependent upon gossip, guilty-by-association, and hearsay,” declared the government spokesman.
The most biting critique of the report, so far, has come from the maligned Governor of the Central Bank, Abdusalam Omer, who called the allegations, “completely unfounded, unsubstantiated, defamatory, and reckless.”  Omer questioned the methodology on which the report was based and the expertise of some members of its panel. Despite the fact that Omer’s name was mentioned 27 times in the report, no one, he claimed, interviewed him or asked him to see the books. In addition, Omer argued that the two designated as “financial experts” on the panel held degrees in anything but finance or economics. One was a police officer in Minneapolis and the other a foreign affairs journalist with Reuters. In essence, none of them has “any relevant training or experience in forensic accounting.”

Criticism of the Report

In a nutshell, the UN Monitoring group makes numerous allegations. It might be a gargantuan task to collect reliable data from Somalia and especially Mogadishu because the city has its share of double-dealing and back-stabbing, not to mention, a vortex of gossip. For instance, several years ago, the UN Monitoring Group made a harebrained allegation that Al-Shabaab, a Sunni jihadist group, had sent 720 fighters to Hezbollah, a Shiite jihadi group in Lebanon, to fight Israel.  However the current report does have some merit, rampant corruption in the country has been well-documented. For instance, a World Bank report in May 2012 found $131 million unaccounted for in then the Transitional Federal Government (TFG) revenues in 2009-2010. If history is a reliable guide, this is a case of attitudinal and cultural perversions. “Somalis did not consider looting national assets in customary law terms as stealing,” the report says and, hence, among many officials, the “pursuit of power and profit became indistinguishable.”

Mogadishu is unique because power interfaces with corruption, religion with clan, jihadism with opportunism, warlordism with legitimacy, and public service with personal enrichment. It is, indeed, a wild and dizzying world.

Hassan M. Abukar is a writer and political analyst.
(Reprinted with permission from African Arguments, August 7, 2013)

  

Sunday, August 4, 2013

Somali Diaspora Stories of Marriage Gone Wrong, Part 2


The stories below, of a husband who suddenly abandoned his family, another whose marriage came to an end because he run out of stories, and a woman who decided not to tell the man she was seeing of her impending marriage to another man, are few examples of how prevalent aborted or short term marriages are in the Somali communities in the U.S.
The common denominator in these odd and short-lived marriage stories is that greed, infidelity, self-absorption and mistrust do not mix with a healthy marriage

The $20,000 Dowry that Never Was
“Guled” is one of many elderly people who are still mystified by the Americanized young Somalis. He laughed when he said that back home, marriage ceremonies were simple and less complicated. Here in the States, he has heard of some newly-weds even renting helicopters. “Where are they flying to?” he mused. Furthermore, there are raucous festivities, showers for the bride, and endless fun gatherings associated with these weddings.

Guled was once a witness to the marriage ceremony of a young couple. The cleric asked the groom if the $20,000 proposed dowry was acceptable. The groom was unfazed and nodded his head in approval. However the cleric and the father of the bride were alarmed at the astronomical sum.
“This is not good,” the cleric declared timidly.

“I agree with you,” replied the father, with implacable honesty.
The father of the bride talked to his daughter and begged her to lower her dowry amount, but she refused. The cleric warned about the futility of putting an undue financial burden on the groom. Then, said Guled, to the chagrin of some of those present, the bride reminded her father about a young lady who had gotten married a week earlier.

“What does that marriage have to do with yours? The father asked in annoyance.
“Well, if that girl’s dowry was $15,000, then mine has to be $20, 000,” said the bride. “She is no better than I am.”

Guled was perplexed by what was transpiring before his eyes. “The good thing about that marriage ceremony,” he stated, “it was completed successfully, albeit with a price tag of $20,000.”
That, however, was just a warm-up for what came next.

After three years of what Guled termed a ‘happy’ marriage, the couple separated. Divorce papers were officially filed.
Did the husband pay the dowry?

“A young man once told me that the majority of those getting married never bother to pay their dowries,” opined Guled. “Many times, it is just for show.”
The $20,000 groom was not the exception.  But then, this is the type of unpaid bill that never goes to a collection agency or ruins your credit worthiness in this world. However, in the Hereafter, as Guled cautioned, it is a different story.

Mary Me Pronto or Adios!
 “Salaad” is an educated man in his early forties.  He was once married to a non-Somali woman who obsessed with Googling him.

“I would go home and my wife would say, ‘So, you gave a speech at the [so-and-so] company function’.” He shared with her many things about his job, news of his relatives, and his friends. Of course, occasionally, he would forget—not out of malice—to tell her other things. When that happened, she got upset and accused him of hiding part of his life from her. Today, many corporations put their activities online. Salaad’s ex feasted on that pool of information, he complained, and used it negatively. At any rate, the couple ended up getting divorced.
Four months after the divorce, Salaad met a Somali woman. She was smart, funny, vivacious, and a dazzling beauty with an exceptional work ethic. For a month, that wonderful woman brought dinner to his office every day.

“I shoveled down more fish in that short period,” he joked, “than a seal can consume in an entire month.” She made Salaad appreciate fish, chicken, and vegetables to the point that his friends teased him, saying he was a traitor to that carnivorous species called Somali men.
Two problems appeared, however, in their relationship. She wanted to get married within a month of their meeting. No, that couldn’t happen, he thought. He was practically on the rebound.  It was too soon for him. She said he was just Americanized. The other problem was that she would constantly call him, like twice every hour, simply to check on him. She wanted to know where he was and who he was meeting. If another woman asked him a question, she was irritated. “That woman is interested in you,” she would say to him. “Look at the way she is staring at you. You are naïve.”

One Tuesday night, she called Salaad and they talked like any couple engaged in “shukaansi” (flirtation). Four days later, he went to the store where her brother worked. Of course, the brother did not know Salaad was talking to his only sister. The brother seemed jovial and chatty, so Salaad asked him what was new.
“My sister is getting married today!” He beamed a big smile.

“Your sister is getting married?” Salaad inquired, hoping this news was some kind of joke.
“Yes, she is.”

Salaad was dumbfounded. Was her brother serious?
“Am I the first Somali man who was getting married and not even invited to his own wedding?” Salaad asked himself.

Salaad was speechless. Then, he composed himself and sheepishly asked who the lucky man was.
“It is Omar Shiino,” said the brother. “They have known each other for two years.”

Salaad was still in a state of shock, but now he was also incensed about his friend’s elaborate and duplicitous actions.  How come she never told him about her other man?  Then, Salaad became petty and also jealous. This Omar Shiino guy was a truck driver and Salaad was a nurse. “This shouldn’t happen,” he thought. 
Of course, Salaad’s friend got married that night, exactly four nights after their memorable banter.  “It was the biggest Somali wedding in the history of Nashville or maybe even in the state of Tennessee,” lamented Salaad.

Two years later, Salaad saw his friend in a cafe. He curiously asked her why she had done what she did to him.
“You were my first choice to marry,” she said, “but you were not ready.”

A year later, her marriage came to an end.                       

The Husband Who Mysteriously Disappeared
 “Anab” was once married to a man who was a great father but a lousy husband.  She tolerated him because he doted on their seven children. One day, Anab and her children woke up and found her husband and their father inexplicably gone. He had abandoned them. Her father-in-law called and told her that her husband had gone to Nairobi, Kenya. “He got tired of you,” he added.

Anab was hurt and became bitter. What kind of prudent man, she wondered, would abandon his own family?  Her husband had no relatives in Kenya. In Nairobi, he stayed in a hotel, ate, prayed, slept, and consumed large quantities of khat, a mild stimulant plant which is legal in some countries but illegal in others like the U.S.  His large family in America sent him several hundred dollars every month, but they did not support Anab and her children.
“My husband led an idyllic life,” she said. “He did not work, support us, or even check on us.” Anab knew her husband had an appetite for the finer things in life, but she never thought he would be so callous and irresponsible.

“I believe his emotional development was arrested at a young age because, at times, he acted like a nine-year-old boy, not a grown man,” she remarked.
She waited for him to return or contact her but nothing happened. After three years, she decided to move on and annulled their marriage on the grounds of neglect, abandonment and a lack of financial support.

Several months later, Anab met another Somali man. Her parents were not happy that she was getting married again so soon. They pleaded with her to wait another year. “It is not good for the children to have in their midst a man who has never married before,” her mother warned her, but she got married anyway.
Her new husband was madly in love with her, and she felt the same way toward him. Everything seemed to be falling into place. She felt happy and her children began to adjust to their stepfather.

However, trouble always begins when things are unusually calm.
Guess who came out of the woods when he heard that Anab had married again? Of course, it was her ex. He had immediately returned to the U.S. and launched into a threatening tirade. “How dare you bring another man to my house?” he screamed at her. His family also threw gasoline on the fire. They heaped indignities on Anab and called her every name in the book. No one asked her ex what he had been doing in Kenya for three years. What had he done for his family during that period? Anab was painted as an irresponsible spouse, a loose woman who couldn’t even wait for her husband.

Her ex went into battle and waged an all-out campaign to ruin her new marriage. He used their children and instilled in them hatred toward their step-father. The campaign was successful. Her new husband left her. The poor man couldn’t take it anymore. 
“In essence, I went through two divorces in a span of six months,” she said.

That was many years ago.
“Did I tell you that I am back with my first husband?” she said as though she were a broadcaster delivering breaking news. Her parents pressured her to take him back. This time, she listened to them and remarried him.

“We have been happily married ever since,” declared Anab triumphantly.
Then, she was quiet a moment and then said reluctantly, “Strike that last sentence. We are still married.”

The Man Who Ran Out of Stories
When “Abdiqani” was courting his ex-wife, he was full of life. He remembered talking to her over the phone for hour after hour. One Saturday, the two broke the record and talked for nine straight hours. They got married and had two children.

Then, Abdiqani ran out of conversation.

“I would come home from work, eat, and relax in the living room. I found myself never talking to her,” he said. Before, he was the one who initiated most of their talks, and she was the great listener. He asked her why they were not talking like they had before. His wife had a terse reply for him.  “You are a man incapable of self-insight,” she told Abdiqani. She also accused him of being self-absorbed and very high maintenance.

In a nutshell, their searing family drama came to an end. The couple got divorced.
But Abdiqani believes he made a big mistake. Suddenly, he became a single man, a status the loquacious man was not used to. “Now, I am lonely, as I do not have anyone to talk to anymore,” he said sadly.

Like a student who did not learn from his past mistakes, Abdiqani asked rhetorically, “Am I egotistical?” Then he floated an odd idea that, perhaps, he should check the Guinness Book of Records. “I think I am, maybe, the first man who was divorced because he ran out of conversation,” he declared.
Hassan M. Abukar is a writer and political analyst.
 
(Reprinted with permission from Sahan Journal, August 3, 2013)