Baffled in Mogadishu?

Similar documents
SOMALIA CONFERENCE, LONDON, 7 MAY 2013: COMMUNIQUE

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL MEDIA BRIEFING

Somalia s Prospect. Africa Briefing Report Brussels 2 July 2010

The securitisation of EU development policy

Security Council The question of Somalia and the spread of terrorism into Africa. Sarp Çelikel

ANNEX. "African Union Mission in Somalia" (AMISOM IV)

Delegations will find attached the Council conclusions on the Horn of Africa/Red Sea as adopted at the 3628th meeting of the Council on 25 June 2018.

7206/16 MC/ml 1 DG D 1B RESTREINT UE/EU RESTRICTED

Somalia. Somalia is the world s prototypical failed state: 3.8

SOMALIA. Abuses in Government Controlled Areas JANUARY 2013

Political and Security Committee EU military mission to contribute to the training of Somali Security Forces (EUTM Somalia) - Information Strategy

Ethiopia s Foreign Policy: Regional Integration and International Priorities

MOTION FOR A RESOLUTION

Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, P.O. Box: 3243 Tel.: (251-11) Fax: (251-11)

Updated: 13 February 2012 MEDIA INFORMATION

Resolution 2010 (2011) Adopted by the Security Council at its 6626th meeting, on 30 September 2011

COMMUNIQUÉ OF THE 33 RD ORDINARY SESSION OF THE IGAD COUNCIL OF MINISTERS ON SOMALIA

ISTANBUL (TURKEY)- 23 FEBRUARY Your Excellency, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, President of the Republic of Turkey;

Horn of Africa: Current Conditions and US Policy. Testimony by Ken Menkhaus Professor, Political Science Davidson College Davidson, North Carolina

Germany and the Middle East

PEMUN Security Council (Novice) Preventing Terrorism and Extremism in the Horn of Africa

Madam Chairwoman, Prime Minister, Distinguished Commissioners, especially Commissioner Chergui, Ambassadors, Ladies and gentlemen,

Exploring the relationship between human security, demand for arms, and disarmament in the Horn of Africa.

COMMUNIQUE OF THE 18 TH EXTRA-ORDINARY SESSION OF THE IGAD ASSEMBLY OF HEADS OF STATE AND GOVERNMENT ON THE ACTIVITIES IN SUDAN, SOMALIA AND ERITREA

REPUBLIC OF UGANDA ADDRESS RT HON DR RUHAKANA RUGUNDA PRIME MINISTER OF THE REPUBLIC OF UGANDA AT THE

Adopted by the Security Council at its 6266th meeting, on 28 January 2010

EAST AND HORN OF AFRICA

Statement. H.E Ato Seyoum Mesfin, Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Federal Democratic. Republic of Ethiopia,

MOTION FOR A RESOLUTION

Why investing in security in Somalia matters for Europe

# NOVEMBER 2017

Security Council. United Nations S/2011/694

The EU and Somalia: Counter-Piracy and the Question of a Comprehensive Approach

It also hosts around 150,000 refugees from neighbouring countries, namely Burundi and the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

United States Policy towards Horn of Africa Since 1991

Somali refugees arriving at UNHCR s transit center in Ethiopia. Djibouti Eritrea Ethiopia Kenya Somalia Uganda. 58 UNHCR Global Appeal

Youth, Peace and Security: Social Policy and Conflict Prevention in Africa Concept Note

UNIÃO AFRICANA P.O. Box: 3243, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, Tel.: (251-11) Fax: (251-11)

Ethiopia and Its Regional Diplomacy: Ethiopia s Dominant Interpretation of the IGAD

Honourable Co-Presidents, Distinguished members of the Joint Parliamentary Assembly, Ladies and Gentlemen,

Eritrea: An International Catch-22. The request of the state of Eritrea to rejoin the Intergovernmental Authority on

I. Summary Human Rights Watch August 2007

The Saga of the SEMG and Eritrea Saturday, 14 October :08 - Last Updated Saturday, 14 October :15

Somalia. Somalia s armed conflict, abuses by all warring parties, and a new humanitarian crisis continue to take a devastating toll on civilians.

The outbreak of the Somali civil war in 1988, the toppling of Siad Barre s dictatorial regime

The African Union s African Mission

Fight against piracy

THE NAIROBI STRATEGY ENHANCED PARTNERSHIP TO ERADICATE DROUGHT EMERGENCIES ADOPTED AT THE. Summit on the Horn of Africa Crisis, 9 September 2011

The EU fight against piracy in the Horn of Africa

JANUARY 2018 COUNTRY SUMMARY. Ethiopia

COUNCIL OF THE EUROPEAN UNION. Brussels, 14 November /11

European Parliament resolution of 15 September 2011 on famine in East Africa

JOINT STRATEGY Stabilization through community-driven safety and socio-economic recovery in Somalia

Global average temperatures are rising, and the weather is becoming wilder.

THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF REGIONAL INTEGRATION IN AFRICA

Global Migration Futures

Somalia MINIMAL ADVANCEMENT EFFORTS MADE BUT CONTINUED PRACTICE THAT DELAYED ADVANCEMENT

Strategy for Sustainable Peace

EUROPEAN UNION EMERGENCY TRUST FUND HORN OF AFRICA WINDOW

Conclusions on children and armed conflict in Somalia

Letter dated 14 October 2013 from the Permanent Representative of Rwanda to the United Nations addressed to the President of the Security Council

STATEHENT DURING. THE GENERAL DEBATE OF THE 71sT SESSION OF THE UNITED NATIONS GENERAL ASSEMBLY

Adopted by the Security Council at its 6068th meeting, on 16 January 2009

Curriculum Vitae. Personal details. Languages. Old Glenburn Heights of Inchvannie Strathpeffer Ross-shire IV14 9AE (H)

ACP-EU JOINT PARLIAMENTARY ASSEMBLY

NMUN NY Conference A MARCH Documentation of the Work of the Security Council (SC)

Security Council. United Nations S/2011/759. Report of the Secretary-General on Somalia I. Introduction. II. Political situation

IRAQ. 17 October 2007 No. 2. Tel Fax

Somalia MINIMAL ADVANCEMENT EFFORTS MADE BUT CONTINUED PRACTICE THAT DELAYED ADVANCEMENT

Somalia Perspectives for getting out of the crisis and building the state: the roles of the regional and international organizations

Adopted by the Security Council at its 7009th meeting, on 24 July 2013

Preamble. Conference organizing committee: Jibril Mohamed; Laura Joseph; Abdikarim Gole; Abukar Osman and Dr. Abdinur Mohamud

Preamble. Conference organizing committee: Jibril Mohamed; Laura Joseph; Abdikarim Gole; Abukar Osman and Dr. Abdinur Mohamud

IMUN UN Security Council. Chair: Darren Ng THE QUESTION OF SOMALIA

J0MUN XIII INTRODUCTION KEY TERMS BACKGROUND. JoMUN XIII General Assembly 6. Forum: General Assembly 6

Job Profile. Re-advertisement - Programme Coordinator (N1) Somalia Country Programme. Somaliland

Policy Brief: The Crisis in the Horn of Africa Updated November 28, 2011

CROSS-BORDER INTEGRATED PROGRAMME FOR SUSTAINABLE PEACE AND SOCIOECONOMIC TRANSFORMATION: MARSABIT COUNTY, KENYA AND BORANA ZONE, ETHIOPA

Africa-EU Policy Dialog

Ethiopia. Freedom of Assembly JANUARY 2017

Whole of Government Stabilisation Programme for the Wider Horn of Africa/East Africa Programme Document

Draft Regional Analysis for the Greater Horn of Africa, an IGAD-OCHA partnership

THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF REGIONAL INTEGRATION IN AFRICA

Despite the fact that several of the countries in

United Nations Reforms

DECISIONS AND DECLARATIONS

European Parliament resolution of 16 February 2012 on the situation in Syria (2012/2543(RSP)) The European Parliament,

T H E I N T E R N A T I O N A L L Y O N M O D E L U N I T E D N A T I O N S R E S E A R C H R E P O R T

Security Council. United Nations S/2010/447. Report of the Secretary-General on Somalia I. Introduction. II. Main developments in Somalia

RMF Uganda Representatives Attend IGAD Consultative Meeting on Global Fund TB/HIV Grant Implementation

CONCEPT NOTE IGAD High Level Ministerial Roundtable Discussion on Remittances as a Tool for Financing Development and Meeting Food Security.

RESEARCH REPORT. Confronting Extremism. Economics. Economic Inclusion of Africa to Prevent Violent Extremism JUNIOR MODEL UNITED NATIONS 2017

East Africa. Introduction. Regional perspectives for the White Paper on Peacebuilding. Jok Madut Jok, Ken Menkhaus and Nuur Mohamud Sheekh

Strategic priority areas in the Foreign Service

Somalia MIGRATION PROFILE

Ethiopia s Foreign Policy: Regional Integration and International Priorities

Report of the Special Envoy for the Somali Refugee Situation

RESUME. AU Fact-Finding Mission to Somaliland (30 April to 4 May 2005)

Statement by High Representative/Vice President Catherine Ashton on the situation in Syria

Kenya. A New Constitution

Transcription:

PERSPECTIVE Baffled in Mogadishu? Europe, the USA and the International Community in Somalia STEFAN BRÜNE September 2015 No politically negotiated end to violent intra-somali conflicts between different viewpoints and interests that could lead to a stable peace are in sight. Parochial interests of international actors (UN, EU, USA) fuelled by geopolitical, national and bureaucratic factors are reducing the effectiveness of the commitment by the international community in Somalia, which is wanting in terms of strategy and insufficiently coordinated. The question of the future of overall Somali statehood is of secondary importance. A step-by-step enhancement of the legitimacy of all actors is needed. Regional dialogue forums along with educational and training programmes oriented towards basic needs could make a contribution here.

A Sort of Peace A comprehensive, non-violent, negotiated settlement of the Somali crisis of state that has been ongoing for more than two decades now is not to be expected any time soon. Until recently Al-Shabaab militias controlled the profitable southern ports in this northeast African country, which was founded in 1960. The population of more than ten million, most of them living in poverty, has suffered under the violent rule of clan militias and criminal rings pursuing their own narrow interests. Radicalised Islamists have repeatedly staged bloody attacks. While the national government in Mogadishu is hoping for an end to historical and regional conflicts within the framework of a single unified federal state, the government of relatively peaceful Somaliland formerly British Somaliland is looking to form an independent state. In spite of unresolved conflicts and a still-feeble central state, the international community believes that the Federal Republic of Somalia has been on the right track since President Hassan Scheikh Mohamud took up office (in September 2012). As it were, experts can point to recent military successes US drones have killed several prominent Al-Shabaab leaders recently, including Ahmed Abdi Godane and are calling for strategic patience. Opinions thus diverge. Critics view the weak, corrupt and quarrelling transitional government as a construct of the international community void of any democratic legitimacy. Although the downsized cabinet, whose membership was reshuffled in February 2015 for the third time in two years is considered to be more representative, inclusive and more technically skilled than its predecessors, an independent electoral commission, a constitutional referendum scheduled for March 2016 or democratic elections slated for September these would all be firsts in the history of the country have yet to materialise in spite of calls for such by the international community. Generally speaking, the question arises as to whether the attempt to form a central state and forge a lasting peace»from above«really makes sense. Traditional Somali society has never had any centralised political structures. Meanwhile Al-Shabaab is increasingly shifting to asymmetrical warfare. There were more than 400 fatalities from attacks in 2014. On 20 February 2015, 28 more persons among them members of Parliament as well as high-ranking members of the government were killed in a suicide attack on the Central Hotel, located in the centre of Mogadishu. 40 persons were wounded, some of them severely, in the bloodiest attack in two years. The masterminds of the strike announced in the Internet that more attacks would be carried out on western facilities. According to media reports, Al-Shabaab has 4,000 to 6,000 combat-ready supporters. In view of the continued precarious security situation and only marginally successful attempts at state-building, the question arises once again regarding prospects for reconciliation, peace and development based on some sort of strategy. High-ranking military officers and staff working at the African Union (AU) in Addis Ababa consider the objectives and time schedules communicated under international pressure by the transitional Somali government to be unrealistic. Katherine Dhanani, the recently appointed US ambassador to Somalia the first one since 1991 will initially be performing her job from Nairobi for security reasons. Nicholas Kay, the Special Representative of the UN Secretary General for Somalia, assesses recent political developments in diplomatic terms: he is»excited and worried«at the same time. Meanwhile, there is much to suggest that the international community is largely uninformed about the reasons and dynamics underlying intra-somali conflicts, with little in the way of a strategy, and largely guided by parochial interests. Instead of fostering a transformation of the way in which Somali players act and their motives based on an analysis of the matrix of interests and contexts and given the accelerated pace of social change characterised by growing rifts between rural, primarily nomadic, traditional-religious pastoralists and increasingly mercantile-oriented urban population groups, an operational and short-term mode of thinking prevails buttressed whenever need be by drones. Sporadic or a complete lack of first-hand experience on the part of international actors accounts for the rest. This is all giving rise to stereotypical perceptions fanned by the media (»the good versus evil terrorists«), thereby impeding indirectly and unintended a long-overdue reorientation that would be so desirable. A policy style that attributes any criticism of the government to radical Islamic terrorists runs the danger of underestimating local, social and economic motives influencing marginalised groups of the population. 1

The Somali Commitment of the International Community Possibilities for external and regional actors to influence internal Somali decision-making processes and actions are constrained. In addition to the AU, the most influential external actors include the Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD), the sub-organisations of the United Nations, the European Union (EU) and Turkey. Besides private security companies, the approximately 22,000 AMISOM soldiers from Kenya, Uganda, Ethiopia, Djibouti and Burundi, with funding above all from the EU and the USA, are of importance in terms of military policy. Their mandate was extended until March 2016 a few days ago. Within the EU, the former colonial powers of Britain and Italy and especially Sweden, where there is an influential Somali diaspora, have made commitments. Recently China and Iran have stated that they intend to devote more attention to Somalia in the future as well. In retrospect, the experience of the international community in Somalia underscores that attempts to stabilise fragile states primarily by promoting training and funding of government security forces runs up against limits pretty quickly. Claiming to have trained more than 1,800 Somali soldiers since 2011, the training mission of the Somali Army (EUTM Somalia) that is receiving support from the EU in cooperation with AMISOM has a patchy record. First of all, there has been and still is a high rate of desertion, however disinclined officials are to admit such. Several hundred Somalis trained by Ethiopian troops have in the meantime changed sides, lured by more handsome Al-Shabaab rewards for their service. Secondly, the Somali National Army (SNA) is a loose amalgamation of local militia without any accountable command and control structure. Nor do irregular payment of salaries (or no payment at all), the illicit sale of government weapons at the Bakara market in Mogadishu and serious human rights violations by AMISOM and government troops, in which the international law of war is violated with impunity, help matters much. 1 Many Somalis view the internationally funded AMISOM mission by neighbouring states to be a mere tool with which to pursue their own narrow, primarily nationally motivated, interests. 1. Somalia and Eritrea Monitoring Group: Report of the Monitoring Group in Somalia and Eritrea pursuant to Security Council Resolution 2060 (2012): Somalia. United Nations Security Council, S/2013/413. The United Nations was originally sceptical about combat missions by countries neighbouring Somalia. Indeed, Somalia s neighbours are for the most part pursuing agendas that are only coordinated with the government in Mogadishu to a limited extent. At the same time, domestic political concerns hold sway. Al-Shabaab is said to be planning attacks on the Kenyan Parliament, while the recent recognition afforded to the semi-autonomous Somali»South West State«by Kenya is viewed critically in Mogadishu. Meanwhile Nairobi is seeking to persuade part of the 450,00 Somalis living in the world s biggest refugee camp in Dadaab in northeast Kenya to return to Somalia. The Ethiopian perspective is also dominated by aversion to difficult-to-calculate risks ethnic Somalis account for a majority of the population in some southeast regions. This is the main factor accounting for recent proposals to establish a military buffer zone along the Ethiopian- Somali border. By the same token, Addis Ababa can count on the support of the Djibouti government, whose President, Omar Guelleh, recently inaugurated»the East African Somali-speaking Regional Academy«in Mogadishu. Regional economic interests furthermore play a major role here. Expansion of the port and airport in Berbera, located in Somaliland, could from the Ethiopian perspective help lessen its one-sided dependence on Djibouti s expensive port. In general, it is difficult to avoid the impression that Ethiopia, if offered the alternative, would prefer independence for Somaliland alongside Great Britain. Another influential factor involves the geopolitical and economic interests of Uganda which are receiving the support of the EU and the USA. Uganda furnishes half of the AMISOM force, making it possible for its regular soldiers to earn eight times more than their low pay at home in Uganda. The action of armed European actors is also being dictated by shallow short-term operational considerations also encouraged by economic incentives. Diplomatically formulated declarations by the military forces involved are usually couched in general terms and tend to culminate in appeals for more money and better equipment. General Massimo Mingiardi, the departing EUTM mission commander, is calling for long-term support to a tune of EUR 2.5 million, thereby obfuscating the question as to how a mission whose training programme is 2

oriented towards the exigencies of conventional warfare instead of putting an end to civil wars can contribute to a lasting peace. From an operational mission perspective, the task has above all been to stave off direct situational threats for example from improvised explosive devices (socalled IEDs). What is to be done, however, when local telecommunications networks (Telesom in Somaliland, Gollis in Puntland or Hormuud in the south), which are considered to be efficient, are at the same time used for reconnaissance purposes by groups with ties to Al- Shabaab? And how should one react when extrajudicial killings and the disappearance of suspects are part of the day-to-day business of Kenyan anti-terror operations affiliated with the EUTM? In other words: what military resources are suited for which peace-policy aims under what conditions and in what contexts? EUTM officers like to applaud the»formidable instrument«of the EU mission to the Horn of Africa at informal meetings of European ministers of defence a reference to the approximately 110 mission soldiers stationed at the airport in Mogadishu. The reality of the situation is different. Systematic collection of fingerprints, by means of which Somali soldiers could be identified beyond any doubt as members of the army, is not taking place at all, nor are there any effective training programmes on a continuous basis, military uniforms or boots. European (and German) soldiers flown in for training purposes are only able to perform their training tasks on a very irregular basis if at all as a result of strict security rules. At the heart of it all is a certain self-delusion. Guided by its own institutional interests, the military is almost completely deaf to political advice, preferring to congratulate itself on imagined successes while engaging in unrealistic discussions of future options. sector. In addition, a key objective has been to make progress in building a central state. This has met with very limited success. What is needed is a comprehensive approach which based on an informed analysis of complex domestic and international causes of conflict views the key to political stabilisation to lie in socio-economic factors. By the same token, there is no alternative to a dialogue-oriented reform strategy of small steps. This should embrace both clan-based militias as well as moderate Al-Shabaab supporters. Progress cannot be achieved overnight and is only possible taking into account the situational factors. At the same time, the task at hand is to distil common interests, establish networks and bring about an accommodation of interests above all with material support. It would by the same token be helpful to carry out a fragility analysis as called for by Swedish experts with the aim of aligning reconciliation and dialogue programmes with education and training programmes. 2 Above and beyond this, it is necessary to impose sanctions on violations of human rights and violations of the law committed by any and all actors within the framework of due process of law. A peaceful future for Somalia presupposes compromise and a political will to achieve peace by all Somali actors. Instead of action being taken for its own sake, greater efforts are needed to develop a uniform approach and training projects for local actors. The»New Deal Compact«recently discussed in Copenhagen provides for the promotion of development projects with local responsibility through partner agreements with international donors. A Look Forward Given the underlying conditions described in the foregoing, are there any possibilities for developing instruments to intervene in the support of policy that would be more appropriate, more effective and more expedient? More than half of international aid for Somalia over the past few years has been earmarked for the security 2. Skeppström, Emma / Per Nordlund: Security, Stabilisation and State Formation in Somali. Challenges for Implementing the Somali Compact, FOIR-R-3899, June 2014. 3

About the author Stefan Brüne is guest professor at the Institute for Peace and Security Studies (IPSS) at the University of Addis Ababa (Ethiopia). He has taught and performed research at European and African universities and has worked with African peace initiatives as staff member of the Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD) in Djibouti. Most recently he has worked as political advisor of the European Union in Mogadishu. Imprint Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung Africa Department Hiroshimastr. 17 10785 Berlin Germany Responsible: Dr Manfred Öhm, Head, Africa Department Phone: +49-30-269-35-7440 Fax: +49-30-269-35-9217 http://www.fes.de/afrika To order publications: Svende.Eickhoff@fes.de Commercial use of all media published by the Friedrich-Ebert- Stiftung (FES) is not permitted without the written consent of the FES. The views expressed in this publication are not necessarily those of the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung. ISBN 978-3-95861-251-8