Aidan Hartley says that Somali piracy is very well-organised and efficient and is opposed publicly only by militant Muslims — who may yet seize power in Mogadishu
This Clean and Shiny militia has grown into the most frightening militant army in Africa today. It controls most of central and southern Somalia and all but a few blocks of Mogadishu itself.
The US lists al-Shabaab as a terrorist organisation linked to al-Qa’eda. Several air strikes have been launched to kill its leaders, but al-Shabaab still protects probably three senior al-Qa’eda operatives linked to terrorist bomb attacks across East Africa. During the past two years, while Western-backed forces battle against insurgents, al-Shabaab has received growing financial support from overseas. Foreign jihadis have flocked to Somalia from Pakistan and now reports are that al-Qa’eda militants from Iraq have chosen Somalia as a new base from which to launch attacks. Unless more moderate groups can reach a peace deal urgently, al-Shabaab will overcome forces of the government and its allies — made up of Ethiopians and a small contingent of African peacekeepers in Mogadishu.
This may happen before Bush retires. It will be a ghastly legacy of his administration that has done so much to deepen Somalia’s crisis. If al-Shabaab seizes Mogadishu, it will be the first time an ally of al-Qa’eda has captured a country since 9/11. The territory ahead is all laku — but at least the scourge of piracy may be squashed.
Aidan Hartley’s Report On Somalia’s Boat People Goes Out On Channel 4’s Unreported World At 7.35 P.m. On Friday 12 December.
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M
December 4th, 2008 6:57pm Report this commentJust a question. You said that the private security on board jump overboard as soon as pirates are sighted. Is this because they are afraid of the pirates or because International Law ties them down so much that if they were to shoot the pirates then their civilian lives would be interrupted/would be punished?
PDL
December 5th, 2008 4:05pm Report this commentMr. Hartley, who has often been critical of "international development" projects, has negected to mention a rare example of success of donor funding. In the 1980's, the Danish government funded a boat-building project in Mogadishu which included setting up a small factory to fabricate fiberglass fishing boats from molds. These are the boats, not very big but virtually unsinkable, that venture far out into the Gulf of Aden to hunt their prey.
S.A.
December 6th, 2008 12:00am Report this commentI came across your article in VF.COM, i was so stunned to see someone writing about the perils of my country, and the headline being in a major media outlet. Finally, i had no clue there was a reporter covering this. I am going to Somalia inshallah in 2010, that is if 1988 doesn't repeat itself. I attempted to raise funds for relief aid but no one in my community wanted to help, all because of tribal politics. So disheartening, a child is a child, it embarrasses me when Somalis shun each other because they believe one Qabil is better and one is sub- human. I plan to change that.
oliver
December 6th, 2008 5:24am Report this commentSA good luck for the effort and I pray for you. Adrian, your articles are to the point and very educational to those who have no clue to the Somali misery and state-failure. Al-shabaab was founded by Somalis educated and indoctrinated in Saudi religious schools. Their leaders number not more than 200 active violent men but they got funding from rich Saudis. The west can easily counter that with its educated Somali Diaspora groups. A quarter-million Somalis now hold European, Canadian and America passports. Thousands of them are college graduates with degrees in every field. why not invest in them, repatriate them back to their homeland, promote them as the leaders since they understand democracy and individual freedom. Somalis shun extremism. they love music, sports and poetry. Appeal to the Somali poets in the process of peace too. I am sure if 5000 Somalis with western education went back to Somalia and become the mayors and government officials, anarchy and extremism would be history.
kiffa
December 6th, 2008 4:33pm Report this commentAnd the 'harsh punishment' in 2006 which stopped piracy Hartley refers to, was hanging or beheading.
The death penalty deterred crime. Hmmmmnnn. Funny, that
Riaz Ahmad
December 7th, 2008 8:28pm Report this commentIn an age where western journalism has sold itself to corporate media, national vested interest, spin and sensationalism,It is welcome news that Aidan Hartley has risen above pettiness to inform us about the true state of affairs.
THREE CHEERS AIDAN, KEEP IT UP.
Riaz Ahmad
December 7th, 2008 8:43pm Report this commentOliver, I can see you have peaceful intentions like all peace loving people and I love to agree with you, Sadly, If I point out the political realities of international affairs, the 5000 or so who will be guiding Somalia to normalcy, any failure in complying with the political regional ambitions of European and American masters, no matter how good they are, will end up in the dust bin of history, just like many others before them. Sadly, this is the reality of westren behaviour in the third world.
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