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Somalina

Return of residents confirm Mogadishu security

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Somalina   

Watch the video at

http://presstv.com/detail/199202.html

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Relative peace and calm have returned to the war-torn Mogadishu for the first time in many years. The slow return to normalcy began in early August when the holy month of Ramadan started and warring sides in the capital Mogadishu seized fire.

 

 

Roads are under construction and schools have reopened with massive students enrolment compared with the time of civil war.

Two decades of war have destroyed most of the city famous buildings and also schools and hospitals.

 

Traders like Maymuna Sheikh Omar views the peace prevailing in Mogadishu as a step towards progress in the business segment.

 

As the fighting in Mogadishu has mostly died down, many of former residents are cautiously returning to see what they can rebuild from the ruins of the war.

 

Among those returning home is Ahmed Hassan whose two-room home made from corrugated iron sheets was demolished by a mortar. He says the peace in the capital has made him move back and repair it in the coming days.

 

Many have not been home for years, living in makeshift camps for the displaced in the perimeters of the government manned districts of the capital Mogadishu.

 

Behind me is a building that depicts the civil war that has engulfed Somalia, and buildings like this are rather common in most parts of the Somali capital, Mogadishu. But, now with the situation retuning to normalcy, people are hoping to build the capital from the ruins of years of civil war.

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RaMpAgE   

CIA boosts covert operations in Somalia

 

UPI

14 September 2011

 

The clandestine U.S. campaign to counter Islamist forces in Somalia appears to be growing daily, with allegations the CIA is running covert operations from a base at Mogadishu airport.

 

These operations allegedly include the rendition of suspected jihadists seized in East Africa and spirited to an underground CIA interrogation center in Mogadishu and using mercenaries to train Somali assassination teams to hit al-Shabaab, the main insurgent group and which is linked to al-Qaida.

 

Jeremy Scahill, who specializes in security affairs, recently spent time in Somalia and reported in The Nation that the CIA operates from a heavily guarded compound at the capital's beachside airport secured by guard towers and has its own fleet of aircraft.

 

The agency, he adds, has a "secret prison" under the headquarters of Somalia's National Security Agency, an arm of the dysfunctional Western-backed Transitional Federal Government which is kept in power largely by a 9,000-strong African Union peacekeeping force known as AMSOM.

 

Suspected al-Shabaab operatives are held there along with prisoners seized in Kenya, Uganda and other East African countries, where al-Qaida is known to operate, and secretly flown to Mogadishu.

 

This is all part of an expanding U.S. counter-terrorism campaign that also embraces Yemen, Pakistan and Afghanistan, even the Philippines and Indonesia.

 

It is spearheaded by the CIA, which has become increasingly militarized in recent years, and the U.S. military's Joint Special Operations Command.

 

The Americans, aided by their allies, have killed or captured dozens of senior al-Qaida chieftains over the last couple of years as this new strategy has shifted into high gear under U.S. President Barack Obama's administration.

 

The administration shies away from putting large conventional forces on the ground as it quits Iraq and starts drawing down forces in Afghanistan as popular support for distant wars wanes in the United States a decade and trillions of dollars after 9/11.

 

Instead it has stepped up the use of armed drones to kill jihadist leaders.

 

On the ground, Scahill says the Americans are increasingly replaying the tactics and often unsavory alliances they made with warlords and tribal chiefs in Iraq.

 

"Over the past year, the Somali government and AMISOM have turned to some unsavory characters in a dual effort to build something resembling a national army and, as the United States attempted to do with its Awakening Councils in the Sunni areas of Iraq in 2006, to purchase strategic loyalty from former allies of the current enemy -- in this case, al-Shabaab," Scahill reported.

 

"Some warlords … have been given government ministries or military rank in return for allocating their forces to the fight against al-Shabaab.

 

"Several are former allies of al Qaida or al-Shabaab, and many fought against the U.S.-sponsored Ethiopian invasion in 2006 or against the U.S.-led mission in Somalia in the early 1990s that culminated in the infamous 'Black Hawk Down' incident."

 

Among these warlords is Yusuf Mohamed Siad, a notorious paramilitary chieftain known by his nom de guerre of Indha Adde, or White Eyes. He's also known as "the Butcher."

 

Siad, who was allied with Islamist militants before the CIA bought him off, is now a three-star general funded by the agency and armed by the U.S.-sponsored AMISOM.

 

At times, Scahill reports, there are up to 30 CIA agents operating in Mogadishu. They appear to function outside the ambit of the TFG and its president, Sheik Sharif Sheik Ahmed.

 

The Americans reportedly have little faith in his corrupt administration in lawless Somalia, which has been without a functioning government since 1991.

 

The Americans appear to be focusing on building up an indigenous counter-terrorism force that they control, independently of the TFG in this 5-year-old proxy war.

 

That's where the mercenaries come in. They include Richard Rouget, aka Col. Sanders, a former French army officer who has fought in several African wars. He works for Bancroft Global Development, a private security company that has a 40-man team of "mentors" in Mogadishu.

 

Rouget and a group of former French, Scandinavian and South African military personnel help train AMISOM's Kenyan and Ugandan troops.

 

This has paid off, sort of. TFG forces, led by AMISOM, recently succeeded in pushing al-Shabaab out of Mogadishu in an offensive launched in May.

 

But that may have had more to do with crippling clan rivalries within the group than anything else.

 

 

RIP Somalia- traitors have sold you cheap.

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