Miskiin-Macruuf-Aqiyaar Posted March 13, 2008 Somalia's message to the world: Get Ethiopia off our back Afyare Cabdi Cilmi Globe and Mail March 11, 2008 P resident George Bush recently visited five African countries — Ghana, Liberia, Tanzania, Benin and Rwanda — and sent his Secretary of State to Kenya to try to end the political crisis there. But when it comes to Somalia, the Bush administration is not only silent but openly supports Ethiopia's occupation. The situation there is now far worse than it was in December of 2006, before Addis Ababa's invasion. In Mogadishu and much of Somalia, the American-supported Ethiopian intervention caused the deaths of more than 6,000 Somalis. According to United Nations officials, the humanitarian crisis in Somalia is "worse than Darfur" — more than a million Somalis fled their homes. The Ethiopian occupation did not deliver the outcome that Washington desired — crushing the Islamists, creating a secure environment and leaving the country quickly. Instead, after more than a year of occupation, the picture is one of assassinations, bombings, looting, media repression and systematic displacement. Worse, there is no end in sight to the quagmire. If there is the will, the U.S. and the rest of the international community can reverse the Somalia crisis. The issue is not about fixing an artificial and illegitimate government that exists on the backs of Ethiopian soldiers and donors' money. The U.S. should aim at the real goals: ending the Ethiopian occupation (the source of Somalia's current problems), addressing the humanitarian catastrophe, initiating a genuine Somali-owned peace process, and dealing with the war crimes committed in the country. It is about time the U.S. realizes that Ethiopia's occupation is radicalizing more Somalis and that the government of warlords is beyond repair. There is no choice: The occupation has to end immediately. Somalis do not want Ethiopian troops in their country and, based on the what has been happening so far, resistance to the occupation will only grow. Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi's scheme to create a no-win situation for the Somalis — accept the Ethiopian occupation or face a brutal civil war — will surely have a negative impact on long-term relations among the diverse communities in the Horn of Africa and different clans in Somalia. From the Somali perspective, Washington and the world community must understand that Ethiopia's occupation troops and their warlord proxies are a huge liability. Moreover, there is an urgent need for a Somali-owned peace process. Earlier peace-building efforts failed because one or another key stakeholder was excluded. Islam as a faith and Islamists as a force cannot be ignored; the values these diverse Islamist groups represent have roots within the Somali people and must be included in any peace process. Dismissing those forces resisting the Ethiopian occupation as terrorists is neither accurate nor useful for building peace in Somalia. The U.S. also needs to understand that its policy preference of incrementally fixing the results of the Ethiopian-manipulated peace conference in Nairobi (or imposing the Ethiopian design on the Somalis, as many believe) is untenable — the process that produced the current charter, parliament and government was tainted. What is needed is a comprehensive process that addresses governance, security and justice. The debate should start with Somalia's 1960 constitution — it is the only one that a majority of Somalis voted for and one that can accommodate different groups' constitutional and policy concerns. The real challenge is establishing a Somali-owned peace process. One important precondition would be to empower a neutral and credible third party. The UN understands this, and urged the Saudi government to take the lead. Others believe Qatar would be an excellent candidate. The international community should also tap the expertise and connections of the Djibouti government and its president, Ismail Omar Guelleh. As an ethnic Somali, Mr. Guelleh understands the nature of the conflict, and he has good relations with Washington. He might be able to facilitate such a process if the international community is serious about ending the conflict. Charles Taylor, Liberia's former warlord/president, is on trial for the crimes that his forces and his proxies committed against the civilians of neighbouring Sierra Leone. Therefore, the international community should not turn a blind eye when it comes to the war crimes that Ethiopia's troops and proxy Somali warlords have been committing against Somalis for the past year. Perhaps the recently created, New York-based Global Centre for the Responsibility to Protect should make Somalia its first project. If a Somali-owned peace process is established, there will be no need for foreign forces — Somalis will keep the peace as they did in peaceful areas of the country, and they will challenge all forms of extremism. The key to bringing the Somali people on board is ending the Ethiopian occupation and the warlords' impunity. The international community has a responsibility to protect Somali civilians from Ethiopia's occupation troops. Its silence sends the wrong message — that Ethiopian soldiers are in Somalia with its consent. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Jacaylbaro Posted March 13, 2008 Somalia's message to the world: Get Ethiopia off our back I don't think the world will come and free Somalia unless Somalis do it ..... Aduunyada rag baa haysta oo waxay rabaan u sheega ,,,, Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Miskiin-Macruuf-Aqiyaar Posted March 13, 2008 You took the message as a literal. The "world" the writer is talking about is not the real world -- he has in mind Mareykanka. Itoobiya would not and cannot be in Soomaaliya without Mareykanka's help. They just cannot do it without their financial, military and political assistance. If Mareykanka ka baxo meesha, their lap dog meeshana wuu ka baxaa, so Soomaalida markaas isku soo hareyso, wada hadli kartana. Faragaliska waa Xabashada uu Mareykanka kor kala socdo, la'aantooda ayba waxba tari lahayn. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Jacaylbaro Posted March 13, 2008 Maraykanku isagaa keenay Ethiopia ,, markaa yaan lagu xisaabtamin inuu ka saarayo ama isagu uga baxayo. Haduu sidaa yeelayo marka horeba muu keeneen. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Koora-Tuunshe Posted March 13, 2008 The issue is not about fixing an artificial and illegitimate government that exists on the backs of Ethiopian soldiers and donors' money. The U.S. should aim at the real goals: ending the Ethiopian occupation (the source of Somalia's current problems), addressing the humanitarian catastrophe, initiating a genuine Somali-owned peace process, and dealing with the war crimes committed in the country. Except for the humanitarian catastrophe, which is a moral obligation to all over the world to respond, how will the United States implement such policy recommendations knowing that a half of our people are under the influence of extremist religious views on how the world works? The last 16 years of neglect, Somalia has proven to be a haven for extremists from all over the world. They have indoctrinated their followers, the ignorant masses to build up their grassroots support. It will be nearly impossible to root out the practice of anarchic terror, a form of violence which attacks the innocent and noncombatant bystanders. I want to pose two important questions to Mikiin-Macruuf-Aqiyaar. What would happen if Ethiopia withdraws? 1. Will Somalis reeling from 17 years of anarchic mode of survival forgive each other and accept peace? 2. and would these Islamists be emboldened by such hasty withdrawal and therefore attempt to retake Mogadishu and its surroundings?? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Fabregas Posted March 13, 2008 OO Islamistska T.F.G iskama celin karaan Ethiopia la'anteed miya? Ethiopians have to leave sooner or later. The long the stay, the more the T.F.G is discredited( as if they haven't already). Ethiopia in Somalia is a blessing to Islamists in Somalia! As for Americans: they have enemies in Somalia. If I was them, amaba waan tageeri laha qofki la dagalama. If it wasn't for Iraq perhaps marines would be patrolling some SOmali cities! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites