Somalia ( ; ), officially the
Republic of
Somalia ( , ) and formerly known as the
Somali
Democratic Republic, is a country located in the
Horn of Africa.
It is bordered by
Djibouti
to the
northwest, Kenya
on its
southwest, the Gulf of
Aden
with Yemen
on its
north, the Indian
Ocean
at its east, and Ethiopia
to the
west.
This article describes its overall history.
See Somalia
for details
of the country as it is today.
Prehistory
Somalia has been inhabited by man since the
Paleaelithic period.
Cave paintings dating back as far as
9000 BC have been found in northern Somalia.
The most
famous of these is the Laas Geel
complex
, which contains some of the earliest known rock art
on the African continent. During the
Stone age, the Doian culture and the Hargeisan
culture flourished here with their respective
industries and factories.
The oldest evidence of burial customs in the
Horn of Africa comes from
cemeteries in Somalia dating back to
4th millennium BC. The
stone implements from the
Jalelo
site in northern Somalia are
said to be the most important link in evidence of the
universality in palaeolithic times between the
East and the
West
Ancient
Ancient
pyramidical structures,
tombs
, ruined cities and
stone walls such as the Wargaade Wall littered in Somalia are evidence
of an ancient sophisticated civilization that once thrived in the
Somali peninsula. The findings of archaeological excavations
and research in Somalia show that this ancient civilization had an
ancient
writing system that remains
undeciphered and enjoyed a lucrative trading relationship with
Ancient Egypt and
Mycenean Greece since at least the second
millennium BC, which supports the view of Somalia being the ancient
Kingdom of Punt. The Puntites "traded
not only in their own produce of
incense,
ebony and
short-horned
cattle, but also in goods from other neighbouring regions,
including
gold,
ivory and
animal skins."
According to the temple reliefs at
Deir
el-Bahri
, the Land of
Punt was ruled at that time by King Parahu and Queen Ati.
Ancient Somalis domesticated the
camel
somewhere between the
third
millennium and
second
millennium BC from where it spread to Ancient
Egypt and
North Africa..
In the classical period, the city states of
Mossylon, Opone,
Malao, Mundus and
Tabae in Somalia developed a lucrative trade
network connecting with merchants from Phoenicia
, Ptolemic Egypt,
Greece
, Parthian Persia, Saba
, Nabataea and the Roman
Empire. They used the ancient Somali maritime vessel
known as the
beden to transport their cargo.
After the
Roman conquest of the Nabataean
Empire and the Roman naval presence at Aden
to curb
piracy, Arab merchants
barred Indian
merchants
from trading in the free port cities of the Arabian peninsula because of the nearby
Roman presence. However, they continued to trade in the port
cities of the
Somali peninsula,
which was free from any Roman threat or spies.
The reason
for barring Indian ships from entering the wealthy Arabian port
cities was to protect and hide the exploitative trade practices of
the Somali and Arab merchants in the extremely lucrative ancient
Red
Sea
-Mediterranean Sea
commerce.
The Indian
merchants for centuries brought large quantities of cinnamon from Ceylon
and the
Far East to Somalia and Arabia. This
is said to have been the best kept secret of the Arab and Somali
merchants in their trade with the
Roman
and
Greek world. The
Romans and Greeks believed the source of cinnamon to have been the
Somali peninsula but in reality, the highly valued product was
brought to Somalia by way of Indian ships.
Through Somali and
Arab traders, Indian/Chinese cinnamon was also exported for far
higher prices to North Africa, the Near
East and Europe, which made the cinnamon
trade a very profitable revenue maker, especially for the Somali
merchants through whose hands the large quantities were shipped
across the ancient sea
and land routes
.
Medieval
History of Islam in the
Horn of Africa is as old as the religion
itself.
The early persecuted Muslims fled to the Axumite
port city of Zeila
in Modern
Somalia to seek protection from the Quraish
at the court of the Axumite Emperor
in modern Ethiopia
. Some of the Muslims that were granted
protection are said to have settled in several parts of the Horn of
Africa to promote the religion.
The victory of the Muslims over the Quraish
in the 7th century had a significant
impact on Somalia's merchants and sailors, as their Arab trading partners had now all adopted Islam and the major trading routes in the Mediterranean
and the Red
Sea
came under the sway of the Muslim Caliphs. Through commerce,
Islam spread amongst the Somali population in the coastal cities of
Somalia. Instability in the
Arabian
peninsula saw several migrations of Arab families to Somalia's
coastal cities, who then contributed another significant element to
the growing popularity of Islam in the
Somali peninsula.
Mogadishu
became the center of Islam on the East African
coast, and Somali merchants established a colony in Mozambique
to extract gold from the Monomopatan mines in Sofala
. In
northern Somalia,
Adal was in its early stages
a small trading community established by the newly-converted Horn
African Muslim merchants, who were predominantly
Somali according to
Arab
and
Somali chronicles. The century
between 1150 and 1250 marked a decisive turn in the role of Islam
in Somali history.
Yaqut Al-Hamawi
and later
ibn Said noted that the Berbers
(Somalis) were a prosperous Muslim nation during that period. The
Adal Sultanate was now a center of a
commercial empire stretching from
Cape
Guardafui to
Hadiya. The Adalites then
came under the influence of the expanding Horn African
Kingdom of Ifat, and prospered under its patronage.
The
capital of the Ifat was Zeila
, situated in
in northern present-day Somalia, from where the Ifat army marched
to conquer the ancient Kingdom of
Shoa
in 1270. This conquest
ignited a rivalry for supremacy between the
Christian Solomonids and the Muslim
Ifatites that resulted in several devastating wars and ultimately
ended in a Solomonic victory over the Kingdom of Ifat after the
death of the popular Sultan
Sa'ad ad-Din
II in Zeila by
Dawit II.
Sa'ad ad-Din II
family was subsequently given safe haven at the court of the
King of Yemen
, where his
sons regrouped and planned their revenge on the
Solomonids.
Muslim Somalia enjoyed friendly relations with
neighboring Christian Ethiopia
for centuries. Despite jihad raging everywhere else in the Muslim world,
Muhammad had issued a hadith proscribing Muslims from attacking Ethiopia
(so long as Ethiopia was not the aggressor) , as it had sheltered
some of Islam's first converts from persecution in modern-day
Saudi
Arabia
. Parts of northwestern Somalia came under
the rule of the
Solomonic
Ethiopian Kingdom in medieval times, especially during the reign of
Amda Seyon I (r. 1314-1344).
In 1403
or 1415 (under Emperor Dawit I or Emperor
Yeshaq I, respectively)
measures were taken against the Muslim Sultanate of Adal (located in present-day
northwestern Somalia, southern Djibouti
, and the Somali
, Oromia
, and Afar
regions of
Ethiopia, centered around first Zeila
then
Harar
, and populated by both Somalis and Afars),
a tributary kingdom that revolted and whose raids were disrupting
rule in adjacent areas. His campaign was eventually
successful, but took much longer than other campaigns at the time
due to the tendency of Adal warriors to disappear into the
countryside after fighting.
In 1403 (or 1415), the Emperor eventually
captured King Sa'ad ad-Din II in
Zeila and had him executed, with the Walashma ruling family exiled
to Yemen
. The
Walashma Chronicle, however, records the date as 1415, which would
make the Ethiopian victor Emperor Yeshaq I. After the war, the
reigning king had his minstrels compose a song praising his
victory, which contains the first written record of the word
"
Somali".
The area remained under Ethiopian control for another century or
so. However, starting around 1527 under the charismatic leadership
of Imam
Ahmad ibn Ibrihim
al-Ghazi (
Gurey in
Somali,
Gragn in
Amharic, both meaning "left-handed), Adal
revolted and invaded Ethiopia. Regrouped Muslim armies with
Ottoman support and arms marched into
Ethiopia employing
scorched earth
tactics and slaughtered any Ethiopian who refused to convert from
Ethiopian Orthodox
Christianity to Islam.
Somalia: From The Dawn of Civilization To The
Modern Times Chapter 8: Somali Hero - Ahmad Gurey
(1506-43) CivicsWebMoreover, hundreds of churches were
destroyed during the invasion, and an estimated 80% of the
manuscripts in the country were destroyed in the process. Adal's
use of firearms, still only rarely used in Ethiopia, allowed the
conquest of well over half of Ethiopia, reaching as far north as
Tigray.
The complete conquest of Ethiopia was
averted by the timely arrival of a Portuguese
expedition led by Cristovão da Gama, son of the famed
navigator Vasco da Gama. The
Portuguese had been in the area earlier in early 16th centuries (in
search of the legendary priest-king
Prester
John), and although a diplomatic mission from Portugal, led by
Rodrigo de Lima, had failed to
improve relations between the countries, they responded to the
Ethiopian pleas for help and sent a military expedition to their
fellow Christians.
A Portuguese fleet under the command of
Estêvão da Gama was sent
from India
and arrived
at Massawa
in February 1541. Here he received an
ambassador from the Emperor beseeching him to send help against the
Muslims, and in July following a force of 400 musketeers, under the command of Christovão da
Gama, younger brother of the admiral, marched into the interior,
and being joined by Ethiopian
troops they were at first successful against the
Muslims but they were subsequently defeated at the Battle of Wofla (28 August 1542), and their
commander captured and executed. On February 21, 1543,
however, a joint Portuguese-Ethiopian force defeated the Muslim
army at the
Battle of Wayna
Daga, in which Ahmed Gurey was killed and the war won. Ahmed
Gurey's widow married his nephew
Nur ibn
Mujahid, who belonged to the Marehan clan, in return for his
promise to avenge Ahmed's death, who succeeded Ahmed Gurey, and
continued hostilities against his northern adversaries until he
killed the Ethiopian Emperor in his second invasion of
Ethiopia
During the
Age of the Ajuuraans, the
sultanates and
republics of
Merca
,
Mogadishu
,
Barawa
,
Hobyo
and their
respective ports flourished and had a lucrative foreign commerce
with ships sailing to and coming from
Arabia,
India
,
Venetia,
Persia
,
Egypt
,
Portugal
and as far away as
China
.
Vasco Da Gama, who passed by Mogadishu in the
15th century, noted that it was a large city with houses of four or
five storeys high and big palaces in its centre and many mosques
with cylindrical minarets.
In the 1500s, Duarte Barbosa noted that many ships from the
Kingdom of
Cambaya
in India sailed to Mogadishu with cloths and spices, for which
they in return received gold, wax and ivory. Barbaso also
highlighted the abundance of
meat,
wheat,
barley,
horses, and
fruit on the coastal
markets, which generated enormous wealth for the merchants.
Mogadishu, the center of a thriving weaving
industry known as toob benadir (specialized for the
markets in Egypt and Syria
), together
with Merca and Barawa also served as transit stops for Swahili merchants from Mombasa
and Malindi
and for the gold trade from Kilwa. Jewish merchants from
the Hormuz brought their Indian textile and
fruit to the Somali coast in exchange for grain and wood, Trading relations were established
with Malacca
in the 15th century with cloth, ambergris and porcelain being the main commodities of the
trade. Giraffes, zebras and incense were exported
to the Ming
Empire
of China, which established Somali merchants as
leaders in the commerce between the Asia and Africa and influenced
the Chinese language with the Somali language in the
process. Hindu merchants from
Surat
and Southeast African merchants from Pate, seeking to bypass both the Portuguese
blockade and Omani
meddling,
used the Somali ports of Merca and Barawa (which were out of the
two powers' jurisdiction) to conduct their trade in safety and
without interference.
Early modern
In the
early modern period, successor
states of the
Adal and
Ajuuraan empires began
to flourish in Somalia.
These were the Gerad Dynasty, the Bari Dynasties
and the Gobroon
Dynasty. They continued the tradition of castle-building
and seaborne trade established by previous Somali empires.
Sultan Yusuf Mahamud
Ibrahim, the third Sultan of the House of Gobroon, started the
Golden age of the Gobroon Dynasty. His army came out victorious
during the Bardheere Jihad, which restored stability in the region
and revitalized the East African ivor trade.
He also received
presents and had cordial relations with the rulers of neighbouring
and distant kingdoms such as the Omani
, Witu and Yemeni Sultans.
Sultan Ibrahim's son
Ahmed
Yusuf succeeded him and was one of the most important figures
in
19th century East Africa, receiving
tribute from Omani governors and creating alliances with important
Muslim families on the East African coast.
In northern Somalia,
the Gerad Dynasty conducted trade with Yemen
and Persia
and
competed with the merchants of the Bari
Dynasty. The Gerads and the Bari Sultans built
impressive palaces, castles and fortresses and had close relations
with many different empires in the
Near
East.
In the late
19th century, after the
Berlin conference, European powers
began the
Scramble for Africa,
which inspired the
Dervish leader
Muhammad Abdullah Hassan to
rally support from across the
Horn of
Africa and begin one of the longest colonial resistance wars
ever. In several of his poems and speeches, Hassan emphasized that
the British "have destroyed our religion and made our children
their children" and that the
Christian
Ethiopians in league with the British
were bent upon plundering the political and religious freedom of
the Somali nation. He soon emerged as "a champion of his country's
political and religious freedom, defending it against all Christian
invaders." Hassan issued a religious ordinance that any Somali
national who did not accept the goal of unity of Somalia and would
not fight under his leadership would be considered as
kafir or
gaal. He soon acquired weapons from
Turkey, Sudan, and other Islamic and/or Arabian countries, and
appointed ministers and advisers to administer different areas or
sectors of Somalia. In addition, Hassan gave a clarion call for
Somali unity and independence, in the process organizing his
follower-warriors. His 'Dervish' movement had an essentially
military character, and the
Dervish
State was fashioned on the model of a
Salihiya brotherhood. It was characterized by a
rigid hierarchy and centralization. Though Hassan threatened to
drive the Christians into the sea, he committed the first attack by
launching his first major military offensive with his 1500 Dervish
equipped with 20 modem rifles on the British soldiers stationed in
the region.
He repulsed the British in four expeditions and had relations with
the
central powers of the
Ottomans and the
Germans. In
1920, the Dervish state collapsed after intensive British arial
bombardments, and Dervish territories were subsequently turned into
a
protectorate.
The dawn of fascism in the early 1920s
heralded a change of strategy for Italy
, as the
north-eastern sultanates were soon to be forced within the
boundaries of La Grande Somalia according to the plan of
Fascist Italy. With the arrival of Governor
Cesare Maria De Vecchi on 15 December
1923, things began to change for that part of Somaliland. Italy had
access to these areas under the successive protection treaties, but
not direct rule. The Fascist government had direct rule only over
the
Benadir territory. Given the defeat of
the Dervish movement in the early 1920s and the rise of
fascism in Europe, on 10 July 1925 Mussolini gave
the green light to De Vecchi to start the takeover of the
north-eastern sultanates. Everything was to be changed and the
treaties abrogated.
The real principles of colonialism meant possession and domination
of the people, and the protection of the country from other greedy
powers. Italy's interpretation of the treaties of protection with
the north-eastern sultanates was comparable to her view of the
Treaty of Wuchale with Ethiopia,
and meant absolute control of the whole territory.
Never mind that the
subsequent tension between Ethiopia and Italy had culminated in
1896 in the battle of
Adwa
in which the Italians were overwhelmed and
defeated.
Governor De Vecchi's first plan was to disarm the sultanates. But
before the plan could be carried out there should be sufficient
Italian troops in both sultanates. To make the enforcement of his
plan more viable, he began to reconstitute the old Somali police
corps, the Corpo Zaptié, as a colonial force.
In preparation for the plan of invasion of the sultanates, the
Alula Commissioner, E. Coronaro received orders in April 1924 to
carry out a reconnaissance on the territories targeted for
invasion. In spite of the forty year Italian relationship with the
sultanates, Italy did not have adequate knowledge of the geography.
During this time, the Stefanini-Puccioni geological survey was
scheduled to take place, so it was a good opportunity for the
expedition of Coronaro to join with this.
Coronaro's survey concluded that the
Majeerteen Sultanate depended on sea
traffic, therefore, if this were blocked any resistance which could
be mounted came after the invasion of the sultanate would be
minimal. As the first stage of the invasion plan Governor De Vecchi
ordered the two Sultanates to disarm. The reaction of both
sultanates was to object, as they felt the policy was in breach of
the protectorate agreements. The pressure engendered by the new
development forced the two rival sultanates to settle their
differences over Nugaal possession, and form a united front against
their common enemy.
The Sultanate of Hobyo was different from that of Majeerteen in
terms of its geography and the pattern of the territory. It was
founded by
Yusuf Ali Keenadid in
the middle of the nineteenth century in central Somalia.
Its
jurisdiction stretched from El-Dheere
through to Dusa-Mareeb in the
south-west, from Galladi to Galkacyo
in the west, from Jerriiban to Garaad in the
north-east, and the Indian
Ocean
in the east.
By 1 October, De Vecchi's plan was to go into action. The operation
to invade Hobyo started in October 1925. Columns of the new Zaptié
began to move towards the sultanate. Hobyo,
El-Buur, Galkayo, and the territory between were
completely overrun within a month. Hobyo was transformed from a
sultanate into an administrative region. Sultan Yusuf Ali
surrendered. Nevertheless, soon suspicions were aroused as
Trivulzio, the Hobyo commissioner, reported movement of armed men
towards the borders of the sultanate before the takeover and after.
Before the Italians could concentrate on the Majeerteen, they were
diverted by new setbacks. On 9 November, the Italian fear was
realized when a mutiny, led by one of the military chiefs of Sultan
Ali Yusuf,
Omar Samatar, recaptured
El-Buur. Soon the rebellion expanded to the local population. The
region went into revolt as El-Dheere also came under the control of
Omar Samatar. The Italian forces tried to recapture El-Buur but
they were repulsed.
On 15 November the Italians retreated to
Bud
Bud
and on the way they were ambushed and suffered
heavy casualties.
While a third attempt was in the last stages of preparation, the
operation commander, Lieutenant-Colonel Splendorelli, was ambushed
between Bud Bud and
Buula Barde. He and
some of his staff were killed. As a consequence of the death of the
commander of the operations and the effect of two failed operations
intended to overcome the El-Buur mutiny, the spirit of Italian
troops began to wane. The Governor took the situation seriously,
and to prevent any more failure he requested two battalions from
Eritrea to reinforce his troops, and assumed lead of the
operations. Meanwhile, the rebellion was gaining sympathy across
the country, and as far afield as
Western Somalia.
The fascist government was surprised by the setback in Hobyo. The
whole policy of conquest was collapsing under its nose. The El-Buur
episode drastically changed the strategy of Italy as it revived
memories of the Adwa fiasco when Italy had been defeated by
Abyssinia.
Furthermore, in the Colonial Ministry in
Rome
, senior officials distrusted the Governor's ability
to deal with the matter. Rome instructed De Vecchi that he was to
receive the reinforcement from Eritrea, but that the commander of
the two battalions was to temporarily assume the military command
of the operations and De Vecchi was to stay in Mogadishu
and confine himself to other colonial
matters. In the case of any military development, the
military commander was to report directly to the Chief of Staff in
Rome.
While the situation remained perplexing, De Vecchi moved the
deposed sultan to Mogadishu. Fascist Italy was poised to re-conquer
the sultanate by whatever means. To maneuver the situation within
Hobyo, they even contemplated the idea of reinstating Ali Yusuf.
However, the idea was dropped after they became pessimistic about
the results.
To undermine the resistance, however, and before the Eritrean
reinforcement could arrive, De Vecchi began to instill distrust
among the local people by buying the loyalty of some of them. In
fact, these tactics had better results than had the military
campaign, and the resistance began gradually to wear down. Given
the anarchy which would follow, the new policy was a success.
On the military front, on 26 December 1925 Italian troops finally
overran El-Buur, and the forces of Omar Samatar were compelled to
retreat to Western Somaliland.
By neutralising Hobyo, the fascists could concentrate on the
Majeerteen. In early October 1924,
E. Coronaro,
the new Alula commissioner, presented Boqor (king) Osman with an
ultimatum to disarm and surrender. Meanwhile, Italian troops began
to pour into the sultanate in anticipation of this operation. While
landing at Haafuun and Alula, the sultanate's troops opened fire on
them. Fierce fighting ensued and to avoid escalating the conflict
and to press the fascist government to revoke their policy, Boqor
Osman tried to open a dialogue. However, he failed, and again
fighting broke out between the two parties. Following this
disturbance, on 7 October the Governor instructed Coronaro to order
the Sultan to surrender; to intimidate the people he ordered the
seizure of all merchant boats in the Alula area. At
Haafuun, Arimondi bombarded and destroyed all the
boats in the area.
On 13 October Coronaro was to meet Boqor Osman at Baargaal to press
for his surrender. Under siege already, Boqor Osman was playing for
time. However, on 23 October Boqor Osman sent an angry response to
the Governor defying his order. Following this a full scale attack
was ordered in November.
Baargaal
was bombarded and destroyed to the ground.
This region was ethnically compact, and was out of range of direct
action by the fascist government of Muqdisho. The attempt of the
colonizers to suppress the region erupted into explosive
confrontation. The Italians were meeting fierce resistance on many
fronts. In December 1925, led by the charismatic leader
Hersi Boqor, son of Boqor Osman, the sultanate
forces drove the Italians out of
Hurdia and
Haafuun, two strategic coastal towns. Another contingent attacked
and destroyed an Italian communications centre at Cape Guardafui,
at the tip of the Horn. In retaliation the Bernica and other
warships were called on to bombard all main coastal towns of the
Majeerteen.
After a violent confrontation Italian forces
captured Ayl
(Eil),
which until then had remained in the hands of Hersi Boqor.
In response to the unyielding situation, Italy called for
reinforcements from their other colonies, notably Eritrea. With
their arrival at the closing of 1926, the Italians began to move
into the interior where they had not been able to venture since
their first seizure of the coastal towns. Their attempt to capture
Dharoor Valley was resisted, and ended in failure.
De Vecchi had to reassess his plans as he was being humiliated on
many fronts. After one year of exerting full force he could not yet
manage to gain a result over the sultanate. In spite of the fact
that the Italian navy sealed the sultanate's main coastal entrance,
they could not succeed in stopping them from receiving arms and
ammunition through it. It was only early 1927 when they finally
succeeded in shutting the northern coast of the sultanate, thus
cutting arms and ammunition supplies for the Majeerteen.
By this
time, the balance had tilted to the Italians' side, and in January
1927 they began to attack with a massive force, capturing Iskushuban
, at the heart of the Majeerteen. Hersi Boqor
unsuccessfully attacked and challenged the Italians at Iskushuban.
To demoralise the resistance, ships were ordered to target and
bombard the sultanate's coastal towns and villages. In the interior
the Italian troops confiscated livestock. By the end of the 1927
the Italians had nearly taken control of the sultanate. Defeated
and Hersi Boqor and his top staff were forced to retreat to
Ethiopia in order to rebuild the forces. However, they had an
epidemic of cholera which frustrated all attempts to recover his
force.
With the elimination of the north-eastern sultanates and the
breaking of the Benaadir resistance, from this period henceforth,
Italian Somaliland was to become a reality.
By 1935, the British were ready to cut their losses in "British
Somaliland". The dervishes refused to accept any negotiations. Even
after they had been soundly defeated in 1920, sporadic violence
continued for the entire duration of British occupation. To make
matters worse, Italy invaded and conquered Ethiopia in
1936, whom the British had been using to help their
effort to put down the Somali uprisings. Now with Ethiopia
unavailable, the British were faced with the option of doing the
dirty work themselves, or packing up and looking for friendlier
territory.
By this time many thousand Italian immigrants were living in
Romanesque villas on extensive
plantations in the south. Conditions for natives were very
prosperous under fascist Italian rule, and the southern Somalis
never violently resisted. It had become obvious then that Italy had
won the horn of Africa, and Britain left upon Mussolini's
insistence, with little protest.
Meanwhile the French colony had faded to obsolescence with
Britain's dwindling control, and it too was neglected. The Italians
then enjoyed sole dominance of the entire East African region
including recently occupied Ethiopia.

Map of Italian East Africa (Africa
Orientale Italiana)
On May 9 1936, Mussolini proclaimed the creation of the
Italian Empire, calling it the "Africa
Orientale Italiana" (A.O.I.) and formed by Ethiopia, Eritrea and
Italian Somalia.
Many investments in infrastructure were made
by the Italians in their Empire, like the Strada Imperiale
("imperial road") between Addis Abeba
and Mogadishu.
See also:
World War II
Italian
hegemony of Somalia was
short-lived, because of
World War II.
At the start of the war, Mussolini realized he would have to
concentrate his resources primarily on the home front to survive
the Allied onslaught.
The Italians conquered the British Somaliland in August 1940, but
the British were able to totally reconquer Somalia by 1941. Italian
officers organized an
Italian guerrilla with
Italian colonial troops, that lasted in Somalia from the end of
1941 to spring 1943.
During the war years, Somalia was directly ruled by a British
military administration and
martial law
was in place, especially in the north where bitter memories of past
bloodshed still lingered.
Unfortunately these policies were as ill-advised as they were
previously. The
irregular bandits
and militias of the Somali outback received a windfall in weaponry,
thanks to the world wide surge in arms production from the war. The
Italian settlers and other anti-British elements made sure the
rebels got as many guns as they needed to cause trouble. Despite a
fresh Somali thorn in their side, the British protectorate lasted
until 1949, and actually made some progress in economic
development.
The British established their capital in the
northern city of Hargeisa
, and wisely allowed local Muslim judges to try most
cases, rather than impose alien British military justice on the
populace.
The British allowed almost all the Italians to stay, except for a
few too risky for their security, and regularly employed them as
civil servants and in the educated professions. The fact that 9 out
of 10 of the Italians were loyal to Mussolini, and probably
actively spying on the Italian Army's behalf during World War II,
was tolerated due to Somalia's relative strategic irrelevance to
the larger war effort. Indeed, considering that they were
technically citizens of an enemy power, the British lent
considerable leeway to the Italian residents, even allowing them to
form their own political parties in direct competition with British
authority.
Post-War period

SYL Monument.
After the war, the British gradually relaxed military control of
Somalia, and attempted to introduce democracy, and numerous native
Somalian political parties sprang into existence, the first being
the
Somali Youth League (SYL) in
1945. The
Potsdam conference was
unsure of what to do with Somalia, whether to allow Britain to
continue its occupation, to return control to the Italians, who
actually had a significant number of people living there, or grant
full independence. This question was hotly debated in the Somalian
political scene for the next several years. Many wanted outright
independence, especially the rural citizens in the west and north.
Southerners enjoyed the economic prosperity brought by the
Italians, and preferred their leadership. A smaller faction
appreciated the British attempt to maintain order.
Ogaden granted to Ethiopia
In 1948 a commission led by representatives of the victorious
Allied nations wanted to decide the Somali question once and for
all.
They
made one particular decision, granting Ogaden
to
Ethiopia, which would spark war decades later. After months
of vacillations and eventually turning the debate over to the
United Nations, in 1949 it was
decided that in recognition of its genuine economic improvements to
the country, Italy would retain a nominal trusteeship of Somalia
for the next 10 years, after which it would gain full independence.
The SYL, Somalia's first and most powerful party, strongly opposed
this decision, preferring immediate independence, and would become
a source of unrest in the coming years.
Despite the SYL's misgivings the 1950s were something of a golden
age for Somalia. With UN aid money pouring in, and experienced
Italian administrators who had come to see Somalia as their home,
infrastructural and educational development bloomed. This decade
passed relatively without incident and was marked by positive
growth in virtually all parts of Somali life. As scheduled, in
1960, Somalia was granted independence, and power transferred from
the Italian administrators to the well developed Somali political
culture.
Independence
[[File:HawoTakoFreedom.jpg|thumb|
Hawo Tako
was a remarkable woman who had played a significant role in Somalia's struggle for independence.[4555]
.]]The freshly independent Somalis loved politics. Every nomad had
a radio to listen to political speeches, and although remarkable
for an African Muslim country, women were also active participants.
There were only mild mumblings from the more conservative sectors
of society. Despite this promising start, there were significant
underlying problems, most notably the north/south economic divide
and the Ogaden issue. Also, long held distrust of Ethiopia and the
deeply ingrained belief that Ogaden was rightfully part of Somalia,
should have been properly addressed prior to independence. The
north and south spoke different languages (
English vs
Italian respectively) had different
currencies, and different cultural priorities.
Starting in the early 1960s, troubling trends began to emerge when
the north started to reject referendums that had won a majority of
votes, based on an overwhelming southern favoritism. This came to a
head in 1961 when northern paramilitary organizations revolted when
placed under southerners' command. The north's second largest
political party began openly advocating
secession. Attempts to mend these divides with the
formation of a Pan-Somalian party were ineffectual; one
opportunistic party attempted to unite the bickering regions by
rallying them against their common enemy Ethiopia and the cause of
reconquering Ogaden. Other nationalistic party platforms included
the independence of the northern Kenyan holdings of the Italian
colony, from Kenya proper. These regions were largely inhabited by
ethnic Somalis who had become accustomed to Italian rule, and were
distressed by the different regime they faced in Kenya.
Clashes with Ethiopia
Somali people in the Horn of Africa are divided among different
territories that were artificially and arbitrarily partitioned by
the former
colonial powers.
Besides
Somalia proper, other historically and almost exclusively
Somali-inhabited areas of the Horn of Africa now find themselves
administered by neighboring countries, such as the Somali Region
in Ethiopia and the North
Eastern Province
(NFD) in Kenya. Pan Somalism was and is an
ideology that advocates the unification of all ethnic Somalis under
one flag and one nation.This led to a series of cross border raids
by Somali insurgents and violent crackdowns by Ethiopian troops
from 1960 to 1964, when open conflict erupted between Ethiopia and
Somalia. This lasted a few months until a cease fire was signed in
the same year. In the aftermath, Ethiopia and Kenya signed a mutual
defense pact to protect their newly acquired territories from the
Somali separatists.
Although
Somalis were, to some extent, politically influenced in the
post-war period by the British and the Italians, the socialist
parties rejected the European's advice whole cloth, and preferred
association with the like-minded Soviet Union
and the People's Republic of China
. By the middle of the 1960s, the Somalis
had initiated a formal military relationship with the Soviet Union
whereby the Soviets provided extensive material and training to the
Somali armed forces in exchange for use of the Somali naval bases.
They also had an exchange program in which several hundred soldiers
from one country went to the others to train or be trained. As a
result of their contact with the Soviet military, many Somali
officers gained a distinctly
Marxist
worldview. China supplied a lot of non-military industrial funding
for various projects. Italy, for its part, continued to support its
expatriate citizens in the
Horn of
Africa. The relationship between the rapidly communizing Somali
government and the Italian government also remained cordial.
The
Somalis, however, were increasingly becoming jaded with the
United
States
, which had been sending substantial military aid to
their hostile neighbor, Ethiopia, and thanks to incessant
anti-Western indoctrination at the hands of their new Russian
friends.
By the late 1960s, the Somali democracy that had gotten off to such
an enthusiastic start just ten years prior, was beginning to
crumble. In the 1967 election, due to a complicated web of clan
loyalties, the winner was not properly recognized and instead a new
secret vote was taken by already elected National Assemblymen
(senators). The central election issue was whether or not to use
military force to bring about the long lived dream of pan-Somalism,
which would mean war with Ethiopia and Kenya and possibly Djibouti.
In 1968 there seemed to be a brief respite from ominous
developments when a telecommunications and trade treaty was worked
out with Ethiopia, which was very profitable for both countries,
and especially for residents on the border who had been living in a
de facto state of emergency since the 1964 cease fire.
1969 was a
tumultuous year for Somali politics with even more party
defections, collusions, betrayals and collaborations than normal.
In a major upset, the SYL and its various closely allied supporting
parties, which had previously enjoyed a near monopoly of 120 out of
123 seats in the Assembly, saw their power slashed to only 46
seats. This resulted in angry accusations of election fraud from
the displaced SYLers, and their remaining members still had the
clout to do something about it. Particularly unsettling was that
the military was a strong supporter of the SYL, since that party
had always been supportive about invading Ethiopia and Kenya, thus
giving the military a reason to exist.
Siad Barre's regime
1969 coup d'etat
The stage was set for a coup d'état, but the event that
precipitated the coup was unplanned. On 15 October, 1969, a
bodyguard killed president
Shermarke while prime minister
Igaal was out of the country. (The
assassin, a member of a lineage said to have been badly treated by
the president, was subsequently tried and executed by the
revolutionary government.) Igaal returned to Mogadishu to arrange
for the selection of a new president by the National Assembly. His
choice was, like Shermarke, a member of the Daarood clan-family
(Igaal was an Isaaq). Government critics, particularly a group of
army officers, saw no hope for improving the country's situation by
this means. Critics also saw the process as extremely corrupt with
votes for the presidency being actively bid on, the highest offer
being 55,000 Somali Shillings (approximately $8,000) per vote by
Hagi Musa Bogor. On 21 October 1969, when it became apparent that
the assembly would support Igaal's choice, army units, with the
cooperation of the police, took over strategic points in Mogadishu
and rounded up government officials and other prominent political
figures.
Although not regarded as the author of the military takeover, army
commander Major General Salad Gabeire Kediye and Mahammad Siad
Barre assumed leadership of the officers who deposed the civilian
government. The new governing body, the Supreme Revolutionary
Council leader Salad Gabeire, installed Siad Barre as its
president. The SRC arrested and detained at the presidential palace
leading members of the democratic regime, including Igaal. The SRC
banned political parties, abolished the National Assembly, and
suspended the constitution. The new regime's goals included an end
to "tribalism, nepotism, corruption, and misrule". Existing
treaties were to be honored, but national liberation movements and
Somali unification were to be supported. The country was renamed
the Somali Democratic Republic.
Supreme Revolutionary Council (SRC)
The SRC also gave priority to rapid economic and social development
through "crash programs", efficient and responsive government, and
creation of a standard written form of Somali as the country's
single official language. The régime pledged continuance of
regional détente in its foreign relations without relinquishing
Somali claims to disputed territories.
The SRC's domestic program, known as the First Charter of the
Revolution, appeared in 1969. Along with Law Number 1, an enabling
instrument promulgated on the day of the military takeover, the
First Charter provided the institutional and ideological framework
of the new regime. Law Number 1 assigned to the SRC all functions
previously performed by the president, the National Assembly, and
the Council of Ministers, as well as many duties of the courts. The
role of the twenty-five-member military junta was that of an
executive committee that made decisions and had responsibility to
formulate and execute policy. Actions were based on majority vote,
but deliberations rarely were published. SRC members met in
specialized committees to oversee government operations in given
areas. A subordinate fourteen-man secretariat—the Council of the
Secretaries of State (CSS)-- functioned as a cabinet and was
responsible for day-to-day government operation, although it lacked
political power. The CSS consisted largely of civilians, but until
1974 several key ministries were headed by military officers who
were concurrently members of the SRC. Existing legislation from the
previous democratic government remained in force unless
specifically abrogated by the SRC, usually on the grounds that it
was "incompatible... with the spirit of the Revolution." In
February 1970, the democratic constitution of 1960, suspended at
the time of the coup, was repealed by the SRC under powers
conferred by Law Number 1.
Although the SRC monopolized executive and legislative authority,
Siad Barre filled a number of executive posts: titular head of
state, chairman of the CSS (and thereby head of government),
commander in chief of the armed forces, and president of the SRC.
His titles were of less importance, however, than was his personal
authority, to which most SRC members deferred, and his ability to
manipulate the clans.
Military and police officers, including some SRC members, headed
government agencies and public institutions to supervise economic
development, financial management, trade, communications, and
public utilities. Military officers replaced civilian district and
regional officials. Meanwhile, civil servants attended
reorientation courses that combined professional training with
political indoctrination, and those found to be incompetent or
politically unreliable were fired. A mass dismissal of civil
servants in 1974, however, was dictated in part by economic
pressures.
The legal system functioned after the coup, subject to
modification. In 1970 special tribunals, the National Security
Courts (NSC), were set up as the judicial arm of the SRC. Using a
military attorney as prosecutor, the courts operated outside the
ordinary legal system as watchdogs against activities considered to
be counterrevolutionary. The first cases that the courts dealt with
involved Shermaarke's assassination and charges of corruption
leveled by the SRC against members of the democratic regime. The
NSC subsequently heard cases with and without political content. A
uniform civil code introduced in 1973 replaced predecessor laws
inherited from the Italians and British and also imposed
restrictions on the activities of
sharia
courts. The new regime subsequently extended the death penalty and
prison sentences to individual offenders, formally eliminating
collective responsibility through the payment of
diyya or blood money.
The SRC also overhauled local government, breaking up the old
regions into smaller units as part of a long-range decentralization
program intended to destroy the influence of the traditional clan
assemblies and, in the government's words, to bring government
"closer to the people." Local councils, composed of military
administrators and representatives appointed by the SRC, were
established under the Ministry of Interior at the regional,
district, and village levels to advise the government on local
conditions and to expedite its directives. Other institutional
innovations included the organization (under Soviet direction) of
the National Security Service (NSS), directed initially at halting
the flow of professionals and dissidents out of the country and at
counteracting attempts to settle disputes among the clans by
traditional means. The newly formed Ministry of Information and
National Guidance set up local political education bureaus to carry
the government's message to the people and used Somalia's print and
broadcast media for the "success of the socialist, revolutionary
road." A censorship board, appointed by the ministry, tailored
information to SRC guidelines.
The SRC took its toughest political stance in the campaign to break
down the solidarity of the lineage groups. Tribalism was condemned
as the most serious impediment to national unity. Siad Barre
denounced tribalism in a wider context as a "disease" obstructing
development not only in Somalia, but also throughout the Third
World. The government meted out prison terms and fines for a broad
category of proscribed activities classified as tribalism.
Traditional headmen, whom the democratic government had paid a
stipend, were replaced by reliable local dignitaries known as
"peacekeepers" (
nabod doan), appointed by Mogadishu to
represent government interests. Community identification rather
than lineage affiliation was forcefully advocated at orientation
centers set up in every district as the foci of local political and
social activity. For example, the SRC decreed that all marriage
ceremonies should occur at an orientation center. Siad Barre
presided over these ceremonies from time to time and contrasted the
benefits of socialism to the evils he associated with
tribalism.
To increase production and control over the nomads, the government
resettled 140,000 nomadic pastoralists in farming communities and
in coastal towns, where the erstwhile herders were encouraged to
engage in agriculture and fishing. By dispersing the nomads and
severing their ties with the land to which specific clans made
collective claim, the government may also have undercut clan
solidarity. In many instances, real improvement in the living
conditions of resettled nomads was evident, but despite government
efforts to eliminate it, clan consciousness as well as a desire to
return to the nomadic life persisted. Concurrent SRC attempts to
improve the status of Somali women were unpopular in a traditional
Muslim society, despite Siad Barre's argument that such reforms
were consistent with Islamic principles.
Siad Barre and scientific socialism
Somalia's adherence to socialism became official on the first
anniversary of the military coup when Siad Barre proclaimed that
Somalia was a socialist state, despite the fact that the country
had no history of
class conflict in
the
Marxist sense. For purposes of Marxist
analysis, therefore, tribalism was equated with class in a society
struggling to liberate itself from distinctions imposed by lineage
group affiliation. At the time, Siad Barre explained that the
official ideology consisted of three elements: his own conception
of community development based on the principle of self-reliance, a
form of socialism based on Marxist principles, and Islam. These
were subsumed under "scientific socialism," although such a
definition was at variance with the Soviet and Chinese models to
which reference was frequently made.The theoretical underpinning of
the state ideology combined aspects of the
Qur'an with the influences of Marx, Lenin, and Mao,
but Siad Barre was pragmatic in its application. "Socialism is not
a religion," he explained; "It is a political principle" to
organize government and manage production. Somalia's alignment with
communist states, coupled with its proclaimed adherence to
scientific socialism, led to frequent accusations that the country
had become a Soviet satellite. For all the rhetoric extolling
scientific socialism, however, genuine Marxist sympathies were not
deep-rooted in Somalia. But the ideology was acknowledged—partly in
view of the country's economic and military dependence on the
Soviet Union—as the most convenient peg on which to hang a
revolution introduced through a military coup that had supplanted a
Western-oriented parliamentary democracy.
More important than Marxist ideology to the popular acceptance of
the revolutionary regime in the early 1970s were the personal power
of Siad Barre and the image he projected. Styled the "Victorious
Leader" (Guulwaadde), Siad Barre fostered the growth of a
personality cult. Portraits of him in the company of Marx and Lenin
festooned the streets on public occasions. The epigrams,
exhortations, and advice of the paternalistic leader who had
synthesized Marx with Islam and had found a uniquely Somali path to
socialist revolution were widely distributed in Siad Barre's little
blue-and-white book. Despite the revolutionary regime's intention
to stamp out the clan politics, the government was commonly
referred to by the code name MOD. This acronym stood for
Marehan (Siad Barre's clan),
Ogaden (the clan of Siad Barre's mother), and
Dulbahante (the clan of Siad Barre
son-in-law Colonel
Ahmad
Sulaymaan Abdullah, who headed the NSS). These were the three
clans whose members formed the government's inner circle. In 1975,
for example, ten of the twenty members of the SRC were from the
Daarood clan-family, of which these three clans were a part, while
the
Digil and
Rahanweyn, sedentary interriverine clan-families,
were totally unrepresented.
The language and literacy issue
One of the principal objectives of the revolutionary regime was the
adoption of a standard
orthography of
the Somali language. Such a system would enable the government to
make Somali the country's official language. Since independence
Italian and English had served as the languages of administration
and instruction in Somalia's schools. All government documents had
been published in the two European languages. Indeed, it had been
considered necessary that certain civil service posts of national
importance be held by two officials, one proficient in English and
the other in Italian. During the Husseen and Igaal governments,
when a number of English-speaking northerners were put in prominent
positions, English had dominated Italian in official circles and
had even begun to replace it as a medium of instruction in southern
schools. Arabic—or a heavily arabized Somali—also had been widely
used in cultural and commercial areas and in Islamic schools and
courts. Religious traditionalists and supporters of Somalia's
integration into the Arab world had advocated that Arabic be
adopted as the official language, with Somali as a vernacular. A
few months after independence, the Somali Language Committee was
appointed to investigate the best means of writing Somali. The
committee considered nine scripts, including Arabic, Latin, and
various indigenous scripts. Its report, issued in 1962, favored the
Latin script, which the committee regarded as the best suited to
represent the phonemic structure of Somali and flexible enough to
be adjusted for the dialects. Facility with a Latin system,
moreover, offered obvious advantages to those who sought higher
education outside the country. Modern printing equipment would also
be more easily and reasonably available for Latin type. Existing
Somali grammars prepared by foreign scholars, although outdated for
modern teaching methods, would give some initial advantage in the
preparation of teaching materials. Disagreement had been so intense
among opposing factions, however, that no action was taken to adopt
a standard script, although successive governments continued to
reiterate their intention to resolve the issue.
On coming to power, the SRC made clear that it viewed the official
use of foreign languages, of which only a relatively small fraction
of the population had an adequate working knowledge, as a threat to
national unity, contributing to the stratification of society on
the basis of language. In 1971 the SRC revived the Somali Language
Committee and instructed it to prepare textbooks for schools and
adult education programs, a national grammar, and a new Somali
dictionary. However, no decision was made at the time concerning
the use of a particular script, and each member of the committee
worked in the one with which he was familiar. The understanding was
that, upon adoption of a standard script, all materials would be
immediately transcribed.
On the third anniversary of the 1969 coup, the SRC announced that a
Latin script had been adopted as the standard script to be used
throughout Somalia beginning January 1, 1973. There were 18 varying
scripts brought to the Language Committee. Of these, 11 were new
Somali scripts invented by inspiring linguists. Of the remaining
seven, 4 were Arabic and 3 Latin. There were over a dozen linguists
and
Shire Jama Ahmed's Latin
version which he already used to print pamphlets won over the
council. It is the Somali script or written
Af Soomaali used today. The Somali script has 21
consonants and five vowels. As a prerequisite for continued
government service, all officials were given three months (later
extended to six months) to learn the new script and to become
proficient in it. During 1973 educational material written in the
standard orthography was introduced in elementary schools and by
1975 was also being used in secondary and higher education.
Somalia's literacy rate was estimated at only 5 percent in 1972.
After adopting the new script, the SRC launched a "cultural
revolution" aimed at making the entire population literate in two
years. The first part of the massive literacy campaign was carried
out in a series of three-month sessions in urban and rural
sedentary areas and reportedly resulted in several hundred thousand
people learning to read and write. As many as 8,000 teachers were
recruited, mostly among government employees and members of the
armed forces, to conduct the program.
The campaign in settled areas was followed by preparations for a
major effort among the nomads that got underway in August 1974. The
program in the countryside was carried out by more than 20,000
teachers, half of whom were secondary school students whose classes
were suspended for the duration of the school year. The rural
program also compelled a privileged class of urban youth to share
the hardships of the nomadic pastoralists. Although affected by the
onset of a severe drought, the program appeared to have achieved
substantial results in the field in a short period of time.
Nevertheless, the UN estimate of Somalia's literacy rate in 1990
was only 24 percent.
Creation of the Somali Revolutionary Socialist Party

Supreme Revolutionary Council
poster
One of the SRC's first acts was to prohibit the existence of any
political association. Under Soviet pressure to create a communist
party structure to replace Somalia's military regime, Siad Barre
had announced as early as 1971 the SRC's intention to establish a
one-party state. The SRC already had begun organizing what was
described as a "vanguard of the revolution" composed of members of
a socialist elite drawn from the military and the civilian sectors.
The National Public Relations Office (retitled the National
Political Office in 1973) was formed to propagate scientific
socialism with the support of the Ministry of Information and
National Guidance through orientation centers that had been built
around the country, generally as local selfhelp projects.

SRC poster
The SRC convened a congress of the
Somali Revolutionary
Socialist Party (SRSP) in June 1976 and voted to establish the
Supreme Council as the new party's central committee. The council
included the nineteen officers who composed the SRC, in addition to
civilian advisers, heads of ministries, and other public figures.
Civilians accounted for a majority of the Supreme Council's
seventy-three members. On July 1, 1976, the SRC dissolved itself,
formally vesting power over the government in the SRSP under the
direction of the Supreme Council.
In theory the SRSP's creation marked the end of military rule, but
in practice real power over the party and the government remained
with the small group of military officers who had been most
influential in the SRC. Decision-making power resided with the new
party's politburo, a select committee of the Supreme Council that
was composed of five former SRC members, including Siad Barre and
his son-in-law, NSS chief Abdullah. Siad Barre was also secretary
general of the SRSP, as well as chairman of the Council of
Ministers, which had replaced the CSS in 1981. Military influence
in the new government increased with the assignment of former SRC
members to additional ministerial posts. The MOD circle also had
wide representation on the Supreme Council and in other party
organs. Upon the establishment of the SRSP, the National Political
Office was abolished; local party leadership assumed its
functions.
Ogaden War
In 1977 the Somali president, Siad Barre, was able to muster 35,000
regulars and 15,000 fighters of the
Western Somali
Liberation Front. His forces began infiltrating into the Ogaden
in May-June 1977, and overt warfare began in July. By September
1977 Mogadishu controlled all of the Ogaden and had followed
retreating Ethiopian forces into non-Somali regions of Harerge,
Bale, and Sidamo.
After
watching Ethiopian events in 1975-76, the Soviet Union
concluded that the revolution would lead to the
establishment of an authentic Marxist-Leninist state and that, for
geopolitical purposes, it was wise to transfer Soviet interests to
Ethiopia. To this end, Moscow secretly promised the
Derg military aid on condition that it renounce
the alliance with the United States
. Mengistu
Haile Mariam, believing that the Soviet Union's revolutionary
history of national reconstruction was in keeping with Ethiopia's
political goals, closed down the U.S. military mission and the
communications centre in April 1977. In September, Moscow suspended
all military aid to Somalia, and began to openly deliver weapons to
its new ally, and reassigned military advisers from Somalia to
Ethiopia.
This Soviet volte-face also gained Ethiopia
important support from North Korea
, which trained a People's Militia, and from
Cuba
and the People's Democratic Republic of Yemen
, which
provided infantry, pilot, and armoured units. Somalia renounced
the Treaty of Friendship and Cooperation with the Soviet Union
expelled all Soviet advisers, broke diplomatic relations with Cuba,
and ejected all Soviet personnel from Somalia
By March 1978, Ethiopia and its allies regained control over the
Ogaden. Siad Barre proved unable to return the Ogaden to Somali
rule, and the people grew restive; in northern Somalia, rebels
destroyed administrative centres and took over major towns. Both
Ethiopia and Somalia were unable to surmount droughts and famines
that afflicted the Horn during the 1980s. In 1988 Siad and Mengistu
agreed to withdraw their armies from further confrontation in the
Ogaden.
Somalia, 1980-90
Repression
Faced with shrinking popularity and an armed and organized domestic
resistance, Siad Barre unleashed a reign of terror against the
Majeerteen, the
Hawiye, and the
Isaaq, carried
out by the Red Berets (Duub Cas), a special unit recruited from the
president's Marehan clansmen. Thus, by the beginning of 1986, Siad
Barre's grip on power seemed secure, despite the host of problems
facing the regime. The president received a severe blow from an
unexpected quarter, however. On the evening of
May 23, he was severely injured in an automobile
accident. Astonishingly, although at the time he was in his early
seventies and suffered from chronic
diabetes, Siad Barre recovered sufficiently to
resume the reins of government following a month's recuperation.
But the accident unleashed a power struggle among senior army
commandants, elements of the president's Marehan clan, and related
factions, whose infighting practically brought the country to a
standstill. Broadly, two groups contended for power: a
constitutional faction and a clan faction. The constitutional
faction was led by the senior vice president, Brigadier General
Mahammad Ali Samantar; the
second vice president, Major General
Husseen Kulmiye; and generals
Ahmad Sulaymaan Abdullah and
Ahmad Mahamuud Faarah. The
four, together with president Siad Barre, constituted the politburo
of the SRSP.
Opposed to the constitutional group were elements from the
president's Marehan clan, especially members of his immediate
family, including his brother, Abdirahmaan Jaama Barre; the
president's son, Colonel Masleh Siad, and the formidable Mama
Khadiija, Siad Barre's senior wife. By some accounts, Mama Khadiija
ran her own intelligence network, had well-placed political
contacts, and oversaw a large group who had prospered under her
patronage.
In November 1986, the dreaded Red Berets unleashed a campaign of
terror and intimidation on a frightened citizenry. Meanwhile, the
ministries atrophied and the army's officer corps was purged of
competent career officers on suspicion of insufficient loyalty to
the president. In addition, ministers and bureaucrats plundered
what was left of the national treasury after it had been repeatedly
skimmed by the top family.
The same month, the SRSP held its third congress. The Central
Committee was reshuffled and the president was nominated as the
only candidate for another seven-year term. Thus, with a weak
opposition divided along clan lines, which he skillfully exploited,
Siad Barre seemed invulnerable well into 1988. The regime might
have lingered indefinitely but for the wholesale disaffection
engendered by the genocidal policies carried out against important
lineages of Somali kinship groupings. These actions were waged
first against the Majeerteen clan (of the
Darod clan-family), then against the Isaaq clans of
the north, and finally against the Hawiye, who occupied the
strategic central area of the country, which included the capital.
The disaffection of the Hawiye and their subsequent organized armed
resistance eventually caused the regime's downfall.
Somali Civil War
With worsening conditions in Somalia, rebels of the
United Somali Congress (USC) led by
Mohamed Farrah Aidid attacked
Mogadishu and on January 26, 1991, Barre's government was taken out
of power.
In May
1991, the northernwestern Somaliland
region of Somalia declared its independence.
This
Isaaq-dominated governing zone is not
recognized by any major international organization or country,
although it has remained more stable and certainly more peaceful
than the rest of Somalia, neighboring Puntland
notwithstanding.
UN Security Council
Resolution 794 was unanimously passed on December 3, 1992,
which approved a coalition of United
Nations peacekeepers led by the United States
to form UNITAF, tasked with
ensuring humanitarian aid being distributed and peace being
established in Somalia. The UN humanitarian troops landed in
1993 and started a two-year effort (primarily in the south) to
alleviate famine conditions.
Many Somalis opposed the foreign presence.
In October, several
gun battles in Mogadishu
between local gunmen and peacekeepers resulted in
the death of 24 Pakistanis and 19 US soldiers (total US deaths were
31). Most of the Americans were killed in the
Battle of
Mogadishu
. The incident later became the basis for the
book and movie
Black Hawk
Down. The UN withdrew on March 3, 1995, having suffered
more significant casualties. Order in Somalia still has not been
restored.
Yet again another secession from Somalia took place in the
northeastern region.
The self-proclaimed state took the name
Puntland
after declaring "temporary" independence in 1998,
with the intention that it would participate in any Somali
reconciliation to form a new central government.
A third
secession occurred in 1998 with the declaration of the state of
Jubaland
. The territory of Jubaland is now
encompassed by the state of Southwestern Somalia and its status is
unclear.
A fourth self-proclaimed entity led by the
Rahanweyn Resistance Army (RRA)
was set up in 1999, along the lines of the Puntland. That
"temporary" secession was reasserted in 2002. This led to the
autonomy of
Southwestern
Somalia. The RRA had originally set up an autonomous
administration over the Bay and Bakool regions of south and central
Somalia in 1999.
Recent history
The various Somali militias have developed into
security agencies for hire. Due to that
development security has much improved and an economic rebound
occurred. It can be said that Somalia is now partly in a state of
anarcho-capitalism where all
services are provided by private ventures. According to CIA
factbook Somalia
telecommunication
firms provide
wireless
services in most major cities and offer the lowest international
call rates on the continent.
In 2000,
Abdiqasim Salad
Hassan was selected to lead the
Transitional National
Government (TNG).
Transitional
Federal Charter of the Somali Republic was approved in February
2004.
On
October 10, 2004, Somali parliament
members elected Abdullahi Yusuf, the
former president of Puntland
, to be the next president and head of the successor
to the TNG, the Transitional Federal
Government (TFG). The other institutions adopted at this
time were the
Transitional
Federal Charter and the selection of a 275-member
Transitional Federal
Parliament.
Piracy off the Somali coast has been a
threat to international shipping
since the beginning of Somalia
's civil war in the early 1990s. Since
2005, many international organizations, including the
International Maritime
Organization and the
World Food
Programme, have expressed concern over the rise in acts of
piracy. Piracy has contributed to an increase in shipping costs and
impeded the delivery of food aid shipments. Ninety percent of the
World Food Programme's shipments arrive by sea, and ships have
required a military escort. According to the Kenyan foreign
minister, Somali pirates have received over US$150 million during
the 12 months prior to November 2008.
Clashes have been reported between Somalia's
Islamist fighters (who are opposed to
the
Transitional Federal
Government) and the pirates.
In August 2008, Combined Task Force 150, a
multinational coalition task force, took on the role of fighting
Somali piracy by establishing a Maritime Security Patrol Area
(MSPA) within the Gulf of
Aden
.
On October 7, 2008, the
United Nations Security
Council adopted
resolution
1838 calling on nations with vessels in the area to apply
military force to repress the acts of piracy.
At the 101st council
of the International
Maritime Organization, India
called for a
United Nations peacekeeping force under unified command to
tackle piracy off Somalia. (There has been a
general and
complete arms embargo against Somalia since 1992.)
In
November 2008, Somali pirates began hijacking ships well outside
the Gulf of Aden, perhaps targeting ships headed for the port of
Mombasa
, Kenya
.
Islamist advance and Ethiopian intervention (2006-2008)
Starting
in May 2006 with the Second
Battle of Mogadishu, civil war wracked Somalia as the Islamic Courts Union (ICU) fought with
warlords, including the Alliance
for the Restoration of Peace and Counter-Terrorism (ARPCT),
pirates, other separatists of Jubaland
and Puntland
, the internationally-backed Transitional Federal
Government (TFG) and Ethiopian
troops. On June 5, 2006 forces associated
with the Islamic Court Union claimed to have taken control of
Mogadishu.
The transitional government in Baidoa tried to secure the help of
African Union peacekeeping troops to
help pacify Somalia so that a government can survive and hold power
with some stability (see
IGASOM). This
proposal has been controversial, because of bringing foreign troops
in the country since 1995 when the United Nations troops left
Somalia (see
UNOSOM II).
Some of the countries contributing troops are also not popular
locally, Ethiopia especially. The warlords in Mogadishu united to
fight any foreign troops, joined by the speaker of the parliament,
causing a fault line in the government. Some of the warlords are
aligned with Islamic miltant groups, and the US government accuses
the involvement of
al-Qaeda amongst the ICU
leaders. Instability, warlord control, piracy and economic chaos
remain significant issues in many parts of the country.
On December 20, 2006, active fighting broke out between the ICU and
Ethiopia in the
Battle of Baidoa.
The ICU considered the conflict a
jihad.
Ethiopia was allied with the TFG and Puntland in its counterattacks
against the ICU. The ICU troops and
technicals proved no match to
Ethiopia's tanks and aircraft and on
26
December, the ICU was forced to retreat to Mogadishu.
They
abandoned Mogadishu on 28 December
2006 and retreated to Jilib
, where
they were again defeated in the Battle
of Jilib on the night of 31 December 2006. A mutiny
within the ICU caused their forces to disintegrate, and abandon
both Jilib and Kismayo. They fled towards the Kenyan border, where
they were trapped between the advancing Ethiopian and TFG armies,
Kenyan border patrols, and a US naval blockade. They were then
engaged in the
Battle of Ras
Kamboni.
In the beginning of March, 2007 the first 1,500
African Union Mission to
Somalia (AMISOM) soldiers begun arriving in Somalia.
Alliance for
the Re-liberation of Somalia (ARS) was formed in September 2007
as a movement to militarily oppose the Somali Transitional Federal
Government (TFG) and their main military ally, Ethiopia.
By the end of December 2007, the ICU forces had taken control of
about half of the port city of Kismayo, around half the districts
of Mogadishu, and totalling around 80% of their former territories,
leaving the Ethopiean-backed regime in the same precarious
situation as it was in Baidoa at the start of 2007.
On March
3, 2008, the United
States
launched an air strike on Dhoble, a Somali town. US officials claimed
the town was held by Islamic extremists, but gave few details to
the press. It was reported that
Hassan
Turki was in the area. The same area was targeted by US bombers
one year earlier. A successful air strike occurred on May 1 in
Dhusamareb. It killed the leader of
Al-Shabab Aden Hashi Eyrow along with another senior
commander and several civilians. However the attack did nothing to
slow down the insurgency.
In
May-June 2008, the Djibouti
-based wing of the ARS and the Transitional Federal
Government met in a conference mediated by the U.N., which resulted
in an 11-point peace agreement signed and announced on 9 June
2008. Because of this, the ARS split into two major wings:
those based in Eritrea, aligned with former ICU leader Sheikh
Hassan Dahir Aweys, who are
adamantly opposed to cooperation with the TFG or Ethiopia, and
those who were based in Djibouti, aligned with former ICU leader
Sharif Sheik Ahmed, who were open
to reconciliation with the nascent national government.
After
long talks in Djibouti
over a ceasefire between the TFG and the moderate
islamists of the Alliance for the
Reliberation of Somalia, agreement was reached that the
parliament would be doubled in size to include 200 representatives
of the opposition alliance and 75 representatives of the civil
society. A new president and prime minister would be elected
by the new parliament, and a commission to look into crimes of war
would be established. A new constitution was also agreed to be
drafted shortly.
In early December 2008, Ethiopia announced
it would withdraw its troops from Somalia shortly, and later
announced that it would first help secure the withdrawal of the
AMISOM peacekeepers from Burundi
and Uganda before
withdrawing. The quick withdrawal of the AMISOM peacekeepers
was seen as putting additional pressure on the
United Nations to provide peacekeeping.
On
December 29, 2008, Abdullahi Yusuf
Ahmed announced before a united parliament in Baidoa
his
resignation as President of
Somalia. In his speech, which was broadcast on national
radio, Yusuf expressed regret at failing to end the country's 17
year conflict as his government had mandated to do.
Adan Mohamed Nuur Madobe, the
speaker of the parliament, became the acting President.
2009
On January 25, 2009 Ethiopian troops completely pulled out of
Somalia.
Al-Shabab captured Baidoa
, where the
TFG parliament was based, on January 26, 2009. Following the
collapse of the TFG, pro-TFG moderate Islamist group
Ahlu Sunnah continued to fight al-Shabaab and
captured a few towns.
An
indirect presidential
election was held in Somalia
on 30
January 2009. Due to the security situation in Baidoa
, it was
held in Djibouti
. Sharif Ahmed,
the former Commander in Chief of the
Islamic Courts Union (ICU), was elected
president.
On February 4, 2009, four Islamist groups, including Hassan Dahir
Aweys' Eritrean branch of the
ARS merged and
created the group
Hisbi Islam, to fight
the new government of Sharif Ahmed.
al-Shabaab also said to fight the
government. On February 8, 2009, they declared war on the new
government of Sharif Ahmed and the
AU peacekeepers.
New TFG President Sheik Sharif Sheik Ahmed arrived in Mogadishu as
a president for the first time on February 7, 2009. The al-Shabaab
and other radical Islamists began firing at the new TFG president
hours later. They accuse the new President of accepting the secular
transitional government.
On February 8, heavy fighting broke out in
southern Mogadishu
. However, al-Shabaab leader Sheikh Mukhtar Robow
(Abu Mansur)met with Sharif Ahmed for peace talks during his visit
to Mogadishu
, while Omar Iman rejected the president.
During these negotiations Sharif Ahmed said he would be prepared to
enforce
Sharia Law in Somalia, which is
currently the hard-liners' main demand. Mukhtar Robow however
denied having talked to Sharif Ahmed and vowed to continue fighting
until his demands for Sharia Law are met.
On
February 10, al-Shabaab launched an offensive to take the Bakool
province. Government officials who had been ousted from
Baidoa had been amassing troops in the city of Hudur (Xudur) and
planning a major offensive to re-take Baidoa. Islamist forces
attacked the province and reached the capital were they started a
battle against government forces.In Galmudug, Clan militia took the
town of Masagaway from al-Shabaab. There was also fighting in
Warsheekh.
On February 22, a double suicide bomb attack on an AU base in
Mogadishu left 11 Burundian soldiers dead and another 15 wounded.
Two days later heavy fighting erupted in the city as TFG and AU
forces attempted to retake the city from radical Islamist forces.
The fighting lasted for two days and killed 87 people, including:
48 civilians, 15 insurgents and 6 TFG policemen.
At the same time as the fighting raged in Mogadishu al-Shabaab
forces took the town of Hudor, to the north-west, in fighting that
killed another 20 people: 10 TFG soldiers, 6 insurgents and 4
civilians.
On February 28, it appeared that
Hisbi
Islam would sign a ceasefire with the
Transitional Federal
Government. However, by March 1, it was clear that no ceasefire
would be given, despite President
Sharif
Ahmed having agreed to proposals for a
truce and having offered to accept the implementation
of
Sharia Law but refused to move troops from
civilian areas despite the Islamists doing so.
On May 6, al-Shabaab announced that they would continue the war
even if
AMISOM
withdrew.
May 25, the government announced an immediate blockade on airstrips
and seaports under insurgent control to stop the flow of weapons
reaching them.
On May 7, a fierce
battle for
control of Mogadishu started between al-Shabaab and Hizbul
Islam on one side, and the government forces and the
ICU on the other. Hundreds were killed
and injured and tens of thousands were displaced. By May 11, rebel
forces gained the upper hand and made large gains taking over most
of the capital. Fighting continued until 14 May and though, they
came close, the rebels didn't manage to overthrow the government.
There were new rounds of fighting from 21-22 May and from 1-4
June.
May 16,
al-Shabaab captured the strategic town of Jowhar
, which
connects Mogadishu with central Somalia.
June 5, Hizbul Islam captured
Wabho in
one of the largest battles of the
war, which left 123 combatants killed. It was also rumoured
Sheikh Hassan Dahir Aweys was injured in this battle.
On June 19, the transitional parliament speaker
Sheik Aden Mohamed Nor ("Madobe")
asked the international community to send foreign troops to Somalia
within the following 24 hours. He stated that that the government's
power is on the verge of being defeated by Islamist forces in the
Somali capital. The Cabinet declared a
state of emergency and Somalia asked for
help from neighbors Kenya, Djibouti, Ethiopia and Yemen. Ethiopia
refused saying intervention needs an international mandate. On June
21, a spokesman for the al Shaabab Islamists said they would fight
any foreign troops. al-Qaeda also made threats against Kenyan
intervention.
June 22, Somali President Sheikh Sharif
Ahmed declared state of emergency in the country as a new round of
fighting in Mogadishu left 12 dead and 20 injured. Hundreds were
said to be fleeing the city
July 4, Sheik Abdinasir Jalil, a former
commander of the training for ICU administration in Beledweyn town
joined Hizbul Islam with is men and vowed to fight TFG forces in
the city and attack Ethiopian forces in El-gal village, which lies
18 km from Beledweyn. He said that the government officials
want to bring Ethiopian troops inside town and that is the reason
they switched sides. Former ICU officials who joined Hizbul Islam,
held a press conference and announced that the ICU administration
in Hiraan had collapsed as they joined the insurgents. Sheikh
Ibrahim Yusuf, top security commander in Beledweyn also defected
along with his forces. General Muktar Hussein Afrah was sent to
Beledweyn along with TFG troops and put in charge there by the TFG
as the ICU administration had collapsed. Many ICU officials
including MPs resigned that day, next to Sheikh Abdinasir Jalil
Ahmed (head of training) and Sheikh Ibrahim Yusuf (head of
security), also Sheik
Osman
Abdulle Barqadle, the army commander of Ugas Khalif airport and
, Sheik Abdullahi Garamgaram, the deputy chief of the emergency
forces resigned.
In resposne, TFG forces led by general Muktar Hussein Afrah started
military manoeuvers in the East side of the city.
July 6, Sheikh
Moktar Ali Zubeyr, the Amir of al-Shabaab
gave government forces an ultimatum of 5 days to hand over their
weapons. The ultimatum was rejected by Indho Ade.
Timelines
Ancient
- *c. 2350 BC: Egyptians
establish trade with the Land of Punt Somalia: From The Dawn of Civilization To The
Modern Times Chapter 4: Punt Land: Ancient Somali Contacts
with Egypt CivicsWeb
- *1st century AD: Ports on the Somali coast are
active in commerce trading with Greek, and later Roman merchants.
Somalia: From The Dawn of Civilization To The
Modern Times Chapter 5: Puntland: Ancient Somali Contacts With
Other Countries CivicsWeb
Muslim era
- *700 - 1000 AD: the Port cities in Somalia
trade with Arab merchants and adopt Islam
- *1300 - 1400 AD: Mogadishu and other
prosperous Somali city-states are visited by Ibn Battuta and Zheng
he
- *1500 - 1660: the rise and fall of the
Adal Sultanate
- *1528 - 1535: Jihad against Ethiopia led by
Ahmad ibn Ibrihim
al-Ghazi (also called Ahmed Gurey and Ahmed Gran; "the
Left-handed")
- *1400 - 1700: the Rise and Fall of the
Ajuuraan Dynasty
- *1800 - 1900: Geledi Sultanate/Hobyo
Sultanate
Colonial era
- *20 July 1887 : British Somaliland protectorate (in the
north) subordinated to Aden
to
1905.
- *3 August 1889: Benadir Coast Italian
Protectorate (in the northeast), (unoccupied until May 1893).
- *1900: Mohammed Abdullah Hassan spearheads
a somali war against foreigners
- *16 March 1905: Italian Somalia (Italian Somaliland) colony (in the
northeast and in the south).
- *July 1910: Italian Somaliland a crown
colony.
- *1920: Mohammed Abdullah Hassan (called
"the Mad Mullah" by the British) dies and the longest and bloodiest
colonial resistance war in Africa ends.
- *15 January 1935: Italian
Somalia part of Italian East Africa with Italian Eritrea
(and from 1936 Ethiopia
).
- *1 June 1936: Part of
Italian East Africa (province of Somalia, formed by the merger of
the colony and the Ethiopian region of Ogaden; see Ethiopia
).
World War II
- *18 August 1940: Italian occupation of British
Somaliland.
- *February 1941: British administration of
Italian Somalia.
Independence and Cold War
- *1 April 1950: Italian Somalia becomes United
Nations trust territory under Italian administration.
- *26 June 1960: Independence of British
Somaliland as the State of Somaliland.
- *1 July 1960: Unification of Somaliland with
Italian Somalia to form the Somali Republic.
- *1960 - 1967: Presidency of Aden Abdullah Osman Daar
- *1967 - 1969: Presidency of Abdirashid Ali Shermarke;
assassinated by one of his own bodyguards.
- *21 October 1969: Somali Democratic
Republic
- *1969 - 1991: Mohamed Siad Barre rises to power in a
coup d'etat after the assassination of Abdirashid Ali Shermarke.
Remains head of state of Somalia until forced from power by General
Mohamed Farrah Aidid. Barre
dies in exile of a heart attack in 1995.
- *23 July 1977 - 15 March 1978: Ogaden War
See also
Notes
References