Monday,
July 21, 2008 - Following
the completion of the fruitful negotiations at
Sanaa, and the declaration of the end of
differences in ARS, it is necessary to shed some
light on the tasks ahead. Unity in diversity
within ARS is the means by which the leadership of
the Alliance will offer the distressed Somalis a
united and pacified Somalia to be engaged in the
path of rehabilitation and development.
In
fact, it must become clear beforehand that the
path of ARS to political supremacy in Somalia is
currently blocked. To unblock the path is the main
challenge for the Alliance; foe identification is
therefore vitally important.
Contrarily to what many believe, it is not
Abyssinia that stands in the way; certainly, the
tyrannical regimes of the Amhara and Tigray
Monophysites (Tewahedo) have always contemplated
and elaborated vicious, revengeful plans against
Somalia, and tried ceaselessly to spread discord
among different Somali tribes. But their effect
was limited, and one should not exaggerate it. In
fact, the Abyssinian invasion of the Somali South
occurred after no less than 15 years of
fratricidal war in Somalia. It is easy to imagine
the Abyssinian army having withdrawn from Somalia,
and the fratricidal war continuing for many more
years.
One could then attribute the disastrous events to
the bad side of the Somali character, the negative
aspects of the Somali mindset and idiosyncrasy; in
fact, all the peoples and all the nations have
their strong and their weak points, their positive
and their negative characteristics. However, in
every people never do the negative characteristics
eclipse the positive qualities, except in times of
severe crisis. For the negative side of a nation´s
traits to come to surface and prevail, a special
stimulation and exacerbation must take place. It
can be due to various socio-political developments
or triggered through foreign involvement.
Various nations have been engulfed to fratricidal
wars and conflicts; from the Paris Commune (1870)
to the post-WW II division of several European
nations, the number of paradigms is impressive.
What truly happened in Somalia?
Following an initially victorious war of
liberation of the illegally occupied by Abyssinia
Ogaden, Somalia lost a war against a superpower
(USSR) and its satellites (Cuba, Czechoslovakia).
Oddly enough, the Reagan administration did not
show a great part of interest for a strategically
located, Oil-rich, third world country that had
just turned its back to the ´Socialist Paradise´
and sought to get engaged in the path of liberal
economy.
Odd, isn´t it?
Not quite if we notice that Siad Barre´s trip
to Washington and other parts of the States
(http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ho/15748.htm) occurred
at the times of the ´Falklands´ War (just 5
days before the Argentinean invasion of the
Malvinas islands) when the pro-British part of the
American establishment prevailed determinedly.
Acting under British guidance, America disregarded
a country that could be a brilliant ´acquisition´
during the Cold War when South Yemen and Abyssinia
were at the hands of Soviet Union. All this
heralded ominous developments that the Somali
president did not accurately anticipate. He found
recourse at what could not be a recourse, namely
oppression and tribal discrimination. This
triggered further reactions; and perfidious
England expected this in order to promote the evil
anti-Somali plans.
But it takes more than bitter antagonism to turn a
person like Abdullahi Yusuf from hero of the
Ogaden War (he was decorated for bravery) to
traitor in Abyssinia. In fact, Abdullahi Yusuf,
along with some Majeerteen officers, organized in
1978 a failed coup, and fled to Kenya. No one
could then imagine that he would proceed to
Abyssinia where he also spent some years in jail.
But Abdullahi Yusuf´s English friends did. Then
started a long story of national shame for
Somalia. As it usually happens, one traitor does
not always realize the nature of his function and
deeds, and brings in friends, associates and
colleagues, causing even greater damage to his
country.
This is precisely the stimulation and exacerbation
of a nation´s negative traits of which I spoke
earlier. And the really ominous conspiracy against
Somalia was elaborated by the British colonials
who always - since the times of the 19th century
Orientalists and explorers - perceived Somalia in
a most vicious and hateful way.
Why Somalia was a problem for Colonial England
Somalia did not fit in the customary realm of the
African tribes that were lodged within meaningless
borders that would ensure – after the
so-called decolonization – either tribal
and ethnic conflicts or a falsely devised
multiculturalism that would prevent both, the
proper nation-building effort and the formation of
comprehensive national identities among many
African nations. The reason was simple: the
Somalis were an entire nation, a big African
nation in terms of population and surface.
On the other hand, Somalia did not fit the realm
of the so-called Arabic speaking peoples which was
the epitome of the devious colonial work in the
area of the Ottoman provinces and the so-called
Middle East.
The malignant colonial effort evolved around the
demolition of the Ottoman Empire (the only country
that rightfully existed in the vast area between
Morocco and Iran) and the destruction of
1) the Berberic Kabylian identity of Northwestern
Africa (which did not need either to speak Arabic
or to be divided into pseudo-states like Libya,
Tunisia, Algeria, Morocco and Mauritania),
2) the Coptic identity of Egypt (whereby the only
possible national language for either Christians
or Muslims is Coptic),
3) the Kushitic African identity of Sudan (whereby
the Arabic speaking group, as descendents of the
Ancient Kushites, should rather merge with the
Oromos and progressively rediscover their national
identity),
4) the Yemenite identity of Yemen (conditioned by
the diffusion of the Pan-Arabism, but still
maintained by the Mehris and the Socotris), and
5) the Aramaic identity of Syria, Lebanon, Iraq,
Kuwait, Qatar, Emirates, Jordan, and Palestine
(which was targeted by the abnormal efforts of
merciless arabization).
However, the alibi for the aforementioned efforts
of the colonial academia and diplomacy was the
existence of various Arabic-based idioms that they
manipulated in order to create the confusion that
would prevent the aforementioned nations from
achieving national identity, and historical
continuity, and cultural originality.
This trickery could not however happen in Somalia
because Arabic was emphatically a foreign language
spoken by an insignificant minority of religious
authorities and merchants.
Somalia consisted therefore in a direct threat for
Anglo-French colonialism because the possibility
was there – in a world well versed into
nationalisms as the late 19th and the early 20th
centuries – for a Kushitic African nation
to develop unhindered a solid nationalism,
complete the nation building procedure (in the
same way many European nations did), and achieve
national identity, historical continuity, and
cultural originality.
The arrival of Italy, as counterbalance to the
evil and inhuman Anglo-French colonialism, in the
Ottoman territories of the Red Sea (which had
never been part of the mountainous, isolated and
tiny Abyssinian kingdom) and in the Somali coast
in the south of the Cape Guardafui (Raas Caseyr)
limited England to the northern part of Somalia´s
territory (that they for the first time called
´Somali – land´), and confined France
to Djibouti. England formed an alliance with
Abyssinia that had two dimensions, namely
a) anti-Ottoman, anti-Islamic and anti-Somali, and
b) anti-Catholic, anti-Italian.
With the Italian occupation and colonization of
the colonial state of Abyssinia, with the Italian
defeat in Africa during WW II, the post-WW II
agreements, and the decolonization, England tried
to engulf Somalia into conflicts with neighboring
states where important Somali populations were
peremptorily enclosed (Kenya and Abyssinia); in
fact both states are invalid. This led to further
English involvement, and the Whitehall deployed
all possible efforts to achieve the dissolution of
Somalia.
Formation of Somali Traitors by England –
the Obstacle in the Path of ARS
This effort had to be carried through specific use
of Somalis who would be selected and ´educated´
in a particular way so that they perform according
to the English plans of Somalia´s destruction.
These people are customarily called traitors
either they are conscious of their role or not.
These people are not always easily identified; and
if they are in some cases identified, little is
known about their real link with the English
state, and the forces behind the scene. Yet, these
people are the real enemies of ARS and Somalia. It
should be necessary for ARS to understand that it
will take a plan, great persistence, and
meticulous effort in order to eliminate these
people and prevent their plans.
Before establishing a plan and pursuing the
necessary efforts to cancel these persons´
plans, the Alliance must understand the rules of
the political game, and play accordingly. With
political opponents, one has to be close, monitor
their deeds, detect their intentions, and avert
their initiatives; frontal opposition is not
possible at the present stage when England
controls the TFG, supports the Abyssinian army´s
presence, and mobilizes America against those who
shamelessly denounces as ´terrorists´ (as if
there can be worse terrorist in the History of the
Mankind than England itself).
Terminating this first article, I will republish
three articles published in English and Somali
media about persons around the TFG president who
are the axes of the nefarious English influence in
Somalia. The articles are very analytical in
highlighting evident ties of these persons with
Somalia´s worst enemy; however, what these
reports do not reveal is how and why these persons
tied their fates with England and became the main
cause of Somalia´s destruction. In a
forthcoming article, I will shed light on the
other, dark, side of these persons´ connection
with England, and the hidden forces that control
the English establishment.
Feared Somali police chief packed peas for Tesco
http://www.hiiraan.com/news2/2008/May/feared_somali_police_chief_packed_peas_for_tesco.aspx
The man in charge of one of Africa´s most
feared secret police services worked in Britain
for Tesco until 18 months ago.
Mohamed Warsame Nur ´Darwiish´, who has been
accused of war crimes in conflict-ravaged Somalia,
was employed through an agency to drive trucks and
pack peas at the supermarket giant´s depot near
Daventry, Northants, until late 2006.
Now he is General Darwiish, head of the National
Security Agency (NSA), the Somali equivalent of
the CIA, which is responsible for detaining and
interrogating terrorist suspects.
The agency is accused of unlawfully imprisoning
and torturing hundreds of citizens and launching
many other repressive security operations.
An investigation by The Mail on Sunday´s Live
magazine and a Channel 4 Dispatches programme
discloses that his family still live in subsidised
housing in Leicester.
The investigation found that he is one of several
Somali leaders linked to allegations of war crimes
who have close links to Britain.
Some members of the Somali government are believed
to have even been given British citizenship, state
benefits and a subsidised home in this country.
All regularly commute between Somalia and their
homes in Britain, where their families remain
while they fight for the UK-backed President,
Abdullahi Yusuf, who is accused of waging a tribal
war.
The president himself has links to Britain –
in 1996, his life was saved by a liver transplant
at London´s Cromwell Hospital. He comes back
for regular check-ups, staying with relatives in
Kilburn, North-West London.
Somalia´s deputy police chief, Ahmed Hashi
Tajir, originally from the Netherlands, spent six
years living in Birmingham, where he worked for a
car parts firm.
His family remain in Spark Hill in Birmingham,
where they receive child tax credit because his
police salary – which is also subsidised by
Britain, via a UN programme – is low.
He said: ´I was in Birmingham for six years. It
is more open than Holland. England more open,
yeah. And I was getting very, very good pay –
£1,500 every four weeks.
Plus attendance allowance. Plus quality bonus.
Plus child tax credit.´
Former Somali interior minister Mohamed Guled Ga´amadheere
is a British citizen, with a home and family in
Leytonstone, East London.
In 2007, he ordered that no international aid was
to be distributed without undergoing a government
inspection, an action the UN claims unnecessarily
obstructed more than a million refugees receiving
food and medical care.
The former military chief of staff, the president´s
spokesman and others are also thought to have
families and homes in the UK.
General Darwiish was a forklift-truck driver at
Tesco's Daventry depot, UK. He now terrorises
Mogadishu
Amongst others: http://www.aayaha.com/viewpage.php?articleid=6900
and http://www.allsanaag.com/DetailsArticls.asp?id=701
Why is the family of Somalia's secret service
chief living in a subsidised house in Leicester?
Because 18 months ago, General Darwiish was a
forklift-truck driver at Tesco's Daventry depot -
and every little helps. Aidan Hartley reports on
the UK-based Somalis governing a country on its
knees.
Watch Dispatches tonight, Monday, 26 May 2008 at
8:00pm on Channel 4. Revealing how key politicians
at the heart of the vicious fighting in Somalia
enjoy incredibly close links to Britain.
There is a shockwave – no bang – and
an explosion sucks air out of my lungs so
violently I taste blood. I glance back through the
truck´s rear window and see a whirlwind of
black smoke and people running. My cameraman says,
´Roadside bomb. A couple of the guys have taken
shrapnel.´ He´s talking about the gun-toting
security guards in the pick-up behind us, who
defend us in case of ambush as we drive round
Mogadishu. Their truck has taken the full blast.
The bomb was probably triggered by an insurgent
using a mobile-phone detonator.
In the back of the truck, a gunman is pulling at a
limp body with a fist-sized hole in the neck, and
there are pints of blood. It´s Abdi, 21, a
guard; he was quiet, polite and had just become a
dad. His eyes are open.
Two bystanders are lying in the road. One of them
is face down, not moving. The other lies on his
back, chest heaving, his guts hanging out. Nearby,
a woman on her way back from the market carrying a
can of cooking oil sits slumped in the dust, her
arm hanging in bloody ribbons.
Soldiers arrive, shooting wildly in the air, and I
realise that we´re sitting targets for a
possible secondary attack. We duck down an
alleyway and a man comes up to me, yelling. ´We
want peace!´ He holds his head. ´Peace and
life! You know? Peace. Life. I don´t want the
fighting.´
A call comes through minutes later, as we´re
racing to Medina Hospital and I´m holding
another of our guards, who is groaning and
bleeding from a leg wound. ´Praise be to Allah,
we have killed two Russian spies,´ says a voice
on the phone to my translator. It´s the
militant Islamic insurgents. Our translator spits
back, ´You stupid idiots, these are
journalists.´
General Darwiish: head of Somalia's National
Security Agency
In Mogadishu, you hear Improvised Explosive Device
(IED) explosions all the time: while in the
shower, eating your lunch, interviewing sources.
You hear the BOOM! And then ask what the target
was and how many died.
There is nothing you can do about roadside bombs.
It makes emerging on to the streets an
incomparably terrifying experience.
My cameraman Jim Foster and I continue working.
Mogadishu is like Baghdad, except there´s no
Green Zone or friendly military bases in which to
take refuge; we are the only Westerners here.
In Medina Hospital, surgeon Mohamed Yusuf and his
team manage to save the woman – named
Faduma – whose arm was smashed in the
blast. ´Shelling is continuous,´ he says,
shaking his head. ´The bullets are continuous.
Continuous, continuous, continuous.
I had 165 injuries come in on one afternoon.´
The Somali doctors work for subsistence pay,
sometimes doing 18-hour shifts. On his way to
hospital today, Mohamed was waylaid by armed men
in uniform, robbed and almost killed. Despite
this, he still turned up to work.
Medina Hospital is always busy; it has the only
functioning trauma ward in the south of the Somali
capital.
Thousands are dying in street fighting and there´s
been a mass exodus from the city. Things are the
worst I´ve seen in 17 years of covering the
civil war here, which explains why UN officials
have designated Somalia as ´Africa´s worst
humanitarian crisis´.
Why is it so bad? And why should we care?
The answer to both questions is because we in the
UK are directly fuelling this mess.
British taxpayers´ money is helping to bankroll
one side in this vicious conflict, and several
Somali leaders who have been linked to allegations
of war crimes against countless civilians are
living double lives in Britain.
Extraordinarily, some members of the Somali
government have even been given British
citizenship, state benefits and a subsidised home
in this country.
Until late 2006, Mohamed Warsame Nur ´Darwiish´
was packing peas and driving forklift trucks for
Tesco at its depot near Junction 18 of the M1 near
Daventry.
Now he is General Darwiish, chief of the feared
National Security Agency (NSA), the principal
counterterrorism arm of Somalia´s government –
the Somali equivalent of the CIA. The NSA is
accused of interning hundreds of people on
trumped-up charges in the notorious Barista
Hisbiga dungeons, where it´s said they are
tortured and ordered to obtain ransoms, often from
overseas relatives, sometimes from Britain.
Meanwhile, Darwiish´s family continue to live
in safety in a housing association property in
Leicester, where rents for similar, subsidised
homes from the same organisation are just £80
per week.
Deputy police chief Ahmed Hashi Tajir is from
Sparkhill in Birmingham. A Dutch passport holder,
he came to Britain from the Netherlands because it
offered better job opportunities – and the
opportunity to benefit from child tax credit.
He is right to be thankful to his British
sponsors. Even his police force is backed by the
UK – Britain has helped pay, via a UN
programme, the salaries of Somali policemen
Former Somali interior minister Mohamed Guled Ga´amadheere
is a British citizen, with a house and family in
Leytonstone, east London.
In 2007, he ordered that no international food or
medical aid was to be distributed without first
undergoing a government ´inspection´,
threatening ´bad consequences´ for those
disobeying him.
He claims this was to ensure the food was safe to
eat; the UN, however, claims this action
unnecessarily obstructed efforts to reach more
than a million refugees facing starvation, and
that aid workers were subjected to ´systematic
harassment´.
During my investigations in Mogadishu, I was
startled to discover that the men I mention here
may not be the only leaders in Somalia with strong
British connections.
The former military chief of staff, the president´s
spokesman and others are thought to have families
and homes in the UK. One government minister
revealed to me that at least half of the cabinet
are British.
All these men
regularly commute between Somalia and their homes
in Leicester, Birmingham and east London, where
their families are left to survive as best they
can while the men are away fighting for their
leader, President Abdullahi Yusuf.
He too has strong links with Britain. In 1996, his
life was saved by a liver transplant at London´s
Cromwell Hospital. The organ donor was a young
British motorcycle-accident victim. Yusuf comes
back for regular check-ups, staying with relatives
in Kilburn, north-west London
Under his rule, up to a million civilians have
fled the bombardments in Mogadishu; they now live
in tents made of plastic and twigs. Mogadishu is a
killing zone half-reduced to rubble.
Both sides may be at fault, but we appear to be
helping to fund a government led by a president
who publicly condones the bombardment of civilian
neighbourhoods in his pursuit of terrorists. The
question is, how on earth did it come to this.
´[Darwiish] used to work at Tesco near
Northampton, picking, packing – normal
warehouse work,´ a young British Somali man
called Dahir told me outside a Leicester community
centre.
´He was on minimum wage, about £800 a month.´
(Tesco cannot elaborate – a spokesman told
Live the high turnover of agency staff makes it
almost impossible to track down their employment
records.)
Dahir said he wasn´t surprised by General
Darwiish´s rapid elevation. ´It must be
tribal. The president and him are the same tribe,
but he and his family got asylum over here.
The UK´s 200,000-strong Somali community arose
as a result of Somalia´s 1992 famine. One of
the worst events in Africa´s troubled history,
it saw waves of refugees coming to Britain and
Europe. By the early part of this decade,
Islamists back in their homeland were being
accused by the US of providing sanctuary for
Al-Qaeda agents.
The US began working with Ethiopian Prime Minister
Meles Zenawi, viewed as a lone Christian ally in a
sea of unfriendly Islam.
In 2006, Ethiopian forces installed President
Abdullahi Yusuf as leader of a pro-Western Somali
government. To help form his government, Yusuf
brought in several colleagues settled in the UK.
Although on the face of it they are leading the
´war on terror´ in Somalia, with support
from the US and the UK, some claim that Yusuf and
his cronies are essentially fighting a tribal
conflict.
Darwiish´s NSA is responsible for the detention
and interrogation of terrorist suspects and
delivering them to the Ethiopians and Americans.
It has imposed martial law and curfews and
launched security operations that have driven
countless civilians from the city. It´s also
accused of raiding and closing radio stations.
NSA agents raided the UN World Food Programme´s
offices in Mogadishu, detaining its top official.
The NSA is alleged to have imposed ´taxation´
on relief supplies destined for the refugee camps.
Victims also claim it arrests hundreds of people
on trumped-up charges of being linked to the
insurgency. I meet a man in Mogadishu, also called
Dahir, who is one of those who has been thrown
into one of the NSA´s dungeons. He says that
cells built for five inmates held more than 20 and
there was neither light nor air. ´They
blindfolded and handcuffed me,´ he tells me.
´They came in a battle wagon with a dozen
security guards. I don´t know why they arrested
me. They asked me questions. They asked me if I
was trained in Afghanistan. I said I didn´t
know where that was.
´The brutality of that prison I cannot
describe. Many inmates were tortured and you could
hear their screams from upstairs. I saw people
paralysed. They pulled out fingernails. I saw this
with my own eyes.
´I never committed crimes against the
government. I have been [to the dungeons] for
nothing. Without seeing a judge. I don´t know
why I was arrested. I was between life and death.
I thought if I was freed I could become a suicide
bomber.
He says the torturers were Ethiopians and Somali
NSA agents, and that some inmates vanished on
rendition flights. The NSA guards had other plans
for Dahir.
´After 60 days the guards offered to negotiate.
They gave me a mobile phone and told me to call my
family.´
He tells me the NSA demanded a ransom; money had
to be raised from Dahir´s family. They paid out
$1,800 in cash, and finally, after 97 days, he was
freed.
What has Darwiish to say about all this? I don´t
know where to find him in Mogadishu –
though the government claims to be legitimate, it
relies entirely on 15,000 Ethiopian occupying
troops, so I drop by the house of their proconsul,
a man called Gebre.
I give him two bottles of whisky as a sweetener
and ask if he can help me line up a meeting with
Darwiish.
´Yeah. He´s here having breakfast,´ Gebre
says, grabbing the bottles. We go into the dining
room and he tells Darwiish to talk to me.
Between mouthfuls, Darwiish confirms that he lived
in Leicester for seven years and knew all about
Britain. He tells me to visit him the next day.
We duly turn up and are just taking our shoes off
as we enter his house when the atmosphere becomes
tense. As Darwiish chain-smokes and chugs
espressos, I can see he´s very angry that Gebre
has forced him to see us.
´Not on camera,´ he orders. ´I´m in
intelligence and we don´t have pictures of our
faces.´ (Nevertheless, we did manage to get a
picture of him for this story).
I ask him about the stories I have heard of
unlawful imprisonment and torture. ´That is
ridiculous!´ he says. ´It´s not true. We
are not torturing people. We are not killing
people. But if you see someone who is really
thinking the wrong way, we tell him, "Please
stop." If he say no, if he say "I am
fighting", then we arrest him.
'Then, after a few days, we´ll say to him,
"Please, why you are fighting? Tell us. Why
you are killing your brothers?
'Why you are killing and destroying your country?
We came from Western country. We want to build our
country, we want to offer you the way of
life."´ I ask him about claims that the
NSA detains people for months without charge. ´It´s
not like that. You get misinformation. Sorry. It´s
not like that´.
The general also denies taking bribes and tells me
nobody pays him a salary: ´I´m working for
free at the moment.´ He says he´s applying
lessons he learned from living in the UK for seven
years and wants to make Mogadishu as good a place
to live as Leicester.
Later, a waiter called Yusuf comes to see me after
being released from 28 days of detention in a
police cell around the corner from our hotel. He
wants to talk because he´s so angry. ´They
[the police] don´t care if you´re alive or
dead. All they care about is money´.
The UK-subsidised pay of deputy police chief Ahmed
Hashi Tajir is $900 a month. He quips that this is
better than nothing. I ask how he cares for his
family back home. ´They are getting Child Tax
Credit, because I get low income.
He denies that the police rob or arrest innocent
civilians. ´We are very careful,´ he says.
´The UNDP [United Nations Development Programme]
pays us and they don´t like to see any
human-rights violations.
But in the streets outside our hotel, we watch
police and government army troops regularly shoot
the place up, and steal mobile phones and money
from passers-by. We even see them hijacking two
vehicles.
I ask Tajir about his British background, and why
he moved from the Netherlands to Birmingham, where
he says he used to work for a car parts firm. ´I
was in Birmingham for six years. It is more open
than Holland. England more open, yeah. And I was
getting very, very good pay. £1,500 every four
weeks. Plus attendance allowance. Plus quality
bonus. Plus child tax credit.´
Gunmen cruise the streets in their 'Technical', a
converted pick-up truck with a heavy machine gun
mounted on its back
The children of Mogadishu, a city that´s now a
byword for African-style chaos, are in desperate
need of help.
I enter a children´s feeding centre and the
crying, the smell, the sight of skeletal babies is
overwhelming. Hundreds of malnourished infants are
turning up daily at feeding centres in the camps
outside the city. They´re not dying yet. But by
the time you see dramatic signs of famine –
skeletal bodies, distended bellies – it´s
almost too late to stop mass death. This is a
famine caused by men, not global warming.
Since the UK-backed government seized power,
Somalia´s coastline has become the world´s
number one spot for pirate attacks, strangling the
delivery of food supplies.
And when UN aid ships do manage to get through,
they have to deal with men such as Mohamed Guled
Ga´amadheere.
In the refugee camps I find little Weiliyo, aged
ten, who months ago was blinded in one eye by
shrapnel.
Her lower leg was smashed, and although she didn´t
lose her foot, the bone inside has disintegrated.
She moans with pain as she hobbles along, her leg
wounds weeping pus. She´s just a few kilometres
from Medina Hospital, but since it´s too
dangerous to get there she´s still a million
miles from care.
In a deserted street I ask a man, Maadey Suufi,
why he doesn´t flee. ´No money to run with,´
he says.
On a recent evening Maadey went to buy some
batteries at the shops, leaving his wife and four
children at home. Minutes later he heard
explosions and returned to find his entire family
blown to pieces.
Near the derelict National Theatre, I meet Ahmed,
who says his son was mortally wounded by artillery
fire.
Cradling his broken child, he ran to the hospital.
On the way he met government soldiers, who shot
him in both legs at point-blank range. His boy
died and he is now paralysed. Ahmed´s neighbour
Abdullahi has lost four children and his left leg
in a mortar blast. Both of these men are now
starving.
Fresh US air strikes against militant leaders this
month are the latest of several signs that America
is still intent on assisting Yusuf´s government
In the skies over Mogadishu, a US spy plane is
visible in daylight, the throb of its engines
audible by night.
'Millions have fled the bombardments - Mogadishu
has been reduced to rubble'
In a now familiar tale of how the US-led ´war
on terror´ has gone badly wrong, heavy-handed
tactics have stoked the insurgency, now being
fought by a coalition of extremist Muslims,
nationalists, criminal gangs and civilians out for
revenge.
´They have created their own enemy,´ says
Ahmed Diriye, a clan elder in Mogadishu. This old
man looks a wreck, and no wonder – he´s
only just been released after 84 days in
detention, without charges, in a prison he says
had no roof.
´If an Ethiopian tank kills your family and you
take up an AK-47, are you a terrorist?´ he
asks. ´Or are you merely defending yourself?´
On our way out of Somalia, at the airport, an NSA
agent demands a $200 bribe, threatening to prevent
us from getting on the ancient DC-9 aircraft that´s
about to fly out. Naturally, we pay.
Back in the UK, I go to see some of the Somali
leaders´ families.
When I visit Darwiish´s house in Leicester,
Somali men and women spill out of the front door
and begin shouting at us.
A woman opens a window and screams at my British
Somali friend in their language, ´You´ll
regret this, you ********!´
They call the police, and while the officer stands
talking to them they continue to hurl abuse in
Somali. They promise to smash our camera.
They threaten to throw bottles and rocks at us.
They take a photo of my Somali friend, and later
he hears a rumour the general´s family are
asking around the British Somali community, trying
to find out who he is.
I then go to Birmingham and knock on Tajir´s
front door to tell his wife I saw her husband and
he looked well. She says, ´Well, I´m not
well. I´m tired. I´ve got six children to
care for and he should be here helping me.´ She
strongly disagrees with what Tajir is doing back
in Mogadishu.
I´ve met President Yusuf before. I interviewed
him a couple of years ago. He said, ´I like
Britain.´ Then he patted his stomach,
indicating his liver. ´In fact, a part of me is
British´.
Next I visit British Somali Zahra Abdullah, who
lives in Birmingham. In 2005, she won a High Court
civil action for costs and damages of £30,000
against President Yusuf for the killing of her
husband in Somalia.
The court found Yusuf was ´the head of an armed
militia in a civil war, retaining the presidency
by force´. Although the judgement makes clear
there wasn´t enough evidence to find Yusuf
personally responsible, it goes on to say, ´It
appears the killing was carried out by those
acting under his authority.´
Yusuf offered ´blood money´ for her husband´s
life and promised an investigation.
Nothing happened. Zahra wants Yusuf arrested, as
General Pinochet was, on a visit to Britain.
She´s written to Tony Blair, Ken Livingstone,
Jack Straw, Frank Dobson, Glenda Jackson and many
others.
They told her to contact the Foreign Office, which
she did. The Foreign Office never replied. Nor did
Scotland Yard. I ask if she expected more.
´Yes,´ she says. ´Justice. No more than
that. I feel helpless, then every day I turn
around and hear this news of what´s happening
to [Somalia´s] people.´
Officials within the UN and the EU have expressed
concerns about the commission of war crimes in
Mogadishu and questioned why they´re supporting
President Yusuf´s government and his Ethiopian
allies. Britain has expressed no such concerns.
Finally, I meet Lord Malloch-Brown, Minister for
Africa, Asia and the UN, at the Foreign Office.
Describing the president and his team as ´a
small [shaft] of light or a way out of this living
hell that is modern Somalia´, he seems unaware
of many of the allegations described here.
He now promises to have British officials look
into them. ´If the circumstantial evidence is
strong enough, we certainly will not [do business]
with them,´ he tells me. ´I´ll give you
that assurance now.´
But at this time there are no plans for the
authorities to investigate President Yusuf,
General Darwiish, Ga´amadheere, Ahmed Tajir and
their colleagues for making the UK a base from
which to prosecute a vicious war in Africa.
Britain and the Bloodshed in Somalia
http://www.thefirstpost.co.uk/37518,features,britain-and-the-bloodshed-in-somalia
Aidan Hartley reports on links between the UK and
7,000 dead on the streets of Mogadishu
Since people cannot reconcile with each other, it
is best to forcefully expel [them] from the
city... You have seen what happened in the last
onslaught. Whoever has survived that will be
exterminated in the one to follow".
The scene is Mogadishu, capital of Somalia. The
man talking in a speech broadcast on radio 12
months ago is Salad Ali Jalle, former minister in
the current Somali government.
In the year since Jalle's speech, roughly 7,000
civilians have been killed in city battles between
pro-government forces and Islamist insurgents.
Nearly a million have fled the military
'onslaughts', ending up in camps stalked by hunger
and sickness. On a recent visit to Mogadishu,
witnesses told me they blamed both the insurgents
and the government for the suffering.
I have seen the effects of the conflict on
civilians: victims with limbs and guts blown out
by explosions; a makeshift famine ward full of
skeletal babies; camps extending to the desert
horizon; heavy gunfire day and night - and
rubble-filled streets where government forces beat
and pillage civilians.
Incredibly, the government side, which still
includes men like Jalle, enjoys extremely close
links with Britain. British taxpayers' money goes
towards paying their salaries.
Leading figures in the regime are British or EU
passport holders. Some have homes in Britain and
return regularly to visit their families here. The
President, Abdullahi Yusuf (left), often comes for
medical check-ups in London, where his life was
saved by a liver transplant from a British donor.
Yet the president stands accused of overseeing the
indiscriminate bombardment of civilian districts
where insurgents lurked. "Any place from
which a bullet is fired, we will bombard it,
regardless of whoever is there," he vowed in
a broadcast days before one of the 'onslaughts'
his deputy Jalle promised. Hundreds were later
killed.
Another key figure in the leadership - who has a
house in Leicester - commands intelligence forces
alleged to have imprisoned hundreds without
charge. The police forces, whose salaries are
partly sponsored by the UK, are linked to
extortion, torture and even extra-judicial
killings.
The deputy police chief has a home in Birmingham.
And some leading officials - one of them a former
minister who is a British citizen with a home in
London - are accused of obstructing the delivery
of humanitarian food aid and medicines desperately
needed by refugees in the camps.
How it all went wrong is the latest installment in
the familiar story of the disastrous US-led 'war
on terror'.
Seventeen months ago, Ethiopian forces seized the
city from Islamist militants and installed the new
government. Washington - together with Britain and
most of the world community - supported this
military solution to Somalia's long-running civil
war, even though it meant the intervention of
outside forces.
During Islamist rule, Mogadishu had experienced
its most peaceful spell since 1991. But the West
wanted the new regime to hunt down al-Qaeda and
its allies in the region.
Yet US air-strikes since the invasion have killed
perhaps two senior al-Qaeda-linked targets - and
many Somalis argue the hunt for a handful of
individual terrorists hardly justifies plunging a
nation into chaos.
And instead of just fighting 'terrorists',
government forces - who are from rival clans to
the majority of Mogadishu's current population -
are alleged to have also set about prosecuting a
tribal war.
Government leaders I spoke to denied all
allegations made against them, though when I
showed Jalle the radio transcript quoted above, he
admitted he had said "some of it".
Like other theatres in the 'war on terror',
solutions in Somalia get harder to find as time
passes. Fresh attempts at peace talks collapsed
this month. A small African Union mission has
failed to fully deploy and is seen by the
insurgents as a target, which does not bode well
for fresh UN promises to beef up peace-keeping
operations.
In Mogadishu, clan elders repeatedly told me they
wanted Britain's help to sort out their mess. But
they said the fact that Britain finances a
government that is linked to serious human rights
abuses only makes things worse.
Aidan Hartley reports from Somalia for Channel 4's
'Dispatches', 8pm, Monday May 26.

