It is up to the international community to address the causes of piracy, not just react to its consequences. Rich and powerful nations know that helping this African country get back on its feet is crucial to combating piracy off its shores, so why are they doing nothing?"
In Somalia, Where can you hide $100 million?
Piracy off the coast of Somalia has been making headlines for months. The story goes like this, or at least this is what we’re told: a few lightly armed Somali pirates in small boats manage to threaten big ships, demand ransoms in the millions of dollars, get paid, and flee. The pirates have repeated this operation so often that the accumulated ransoms have reached some $100 million.
It all sounds like a stock Hollywood movie: maritime hijacking, intense negotiations, converging warships, gun battles, and a brave hero (American, of course) to free the captured ships.
Yet, for all the media attention it has received, certain key questions about the piracy have not been asked:
Where in Somalia are these pirates hiding the $100 million, which is in cash, not bank drafts? On the one hand, they are free to do as they please with the money because they have no fear of being arrested because there is no government to impose law and order. On the other hand, Somalia has no banks, so if the pirates have made deposits, in which country or countries are the banks?
We are being told, and asked to believe, that NATO war brigades have not been able to stop the pirates, but from where are these pirates getting their light arms, and who is supporting and training them?
We hear about diplomatic initiatives, but by whom and for what?
Counter-piracy action has been sanctioned by recent UN Security Council resolutions, and Somali officials publicly acknowledge the need for military and intelligence assistance, but what form, precisely, should this action take?
In contrast to this current media attention, over the past 10 years the Western media did not give even a bit of coverage to the suffering of desperate Somali refugees who fled the country in rusted boats. These boats became stranded and sank in the same waters where piracy is now going on. Ships passing the stricken vessels did not even stop to help those who could not get to shore, as is required by international law. As for the thousands who managed to make it to coast of Yemen, rich and powerful countries did not respond to Yemen’s appeal for relief.
Slow human development has been a feature of Somalia ever since the protectorate of British Somaliland and the colony of Italian Somaliland merged to form the country in 1960. In recent years, civil war, invasion and political unrest have made this poor nation even poorer.
The country has been without an effective central government since President Mohamed Siad Barre was overthrown in 1991. Since then, civil war has claimed the lives of 1 million people, and famine and illicit trade have become widespread.
Also in 1991, the northwest part of Somalia, the former British part, unilaterally declared itself the independent Republic of Somaliland. Compared to the rest of Somalia, it has enjoyed relative stability. It has its own government, capital city, army, flag and currency, but is not recognized by the international community.
In 2006 an Islamic party gained control of much of the south, including the capital Mogadishu, after their militias kicked out the warlords. But forces loyal to the interim administration regained control at the end of the year with the backing of Ethiopian troops.
By late 2008, Islamic parties-including the al-Shabaab group, which the U.S. accuses of having links to al-Qaida-fought back and regained control of most of the south.
In January 2009, Ethiopia pulled its troops out and Somalia’s parliament met in neighbouring Djibouti, where it extended the transitional federal government extended for another two years, and installed the current president Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmad.
Piracy is just the latest in a series of misfortunes. A recent report by the U.K.’s Chatham House said attacks more than doubled in 2008, and have involved more than 60 ships. However, these attacks can be stopped by adopting security measures such as: using convoys of ships (already done in some cases); arming crews (the American crew of cargo ship Maersk Alabama fought back); arming merchant ships with heavy guns; or providing military escorts.
The French had successfully rescued hostages and captured pirates until commandos recently stormed a yacht and in the process killed its owner.
It is up to the international community to address the causes of piracy, not just react to its consequences. Rich and powerful nations know that helping this African country get back on its feet is crucial to combating piracy off its shores, so why are they doing nothing?
Friday, May 1, 2009
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Ex-Somali Police Commissioner General Mohamed Abshir
Sultan Kenadid
Seyyid Muhammad Abdille Hassan
Sultan Mohamud Ali Shire
Designation of Al-Shabaab
SOMALI REPUBLICANS
About Us
The Foundation is dedicated to networking like-minded Somalis opposed to the terrorist insurgency that is plaguing our beloved homeland and informing the international public at large about what is really happening throughout the Horn of Africa region.
Blog Archive
-
▼
2009
(2838)
-
▼
May
(280)
- U.S. can't afford to ignore situation in Somalia
- A Hero's Welcome.
- US determined to save Sharif govt despite expert w...
- Katumba decorate AU troops in Somalia
- Child among 2 civilians killed in Somalia fighting
- Some quick updates on the Somali Piracy situation....
- The Most Dangerous Place in the World
- Somalia: The threat next door
- Somalia’s new government: Presenting new hope or f...
- Fighting between Islamists starts in Mahaday distr...
- The Home Grown Terror Threat
- G8 wants closer cooperation to fight terrorism, pi...
- Humanitarian crisis in Somalia
- Somalia: one week in hell – inside the city the wo...
- Somalia peacekeepers learn about urban warfare
- Kenya to help fight Somali rebels
- Somali government Freed Hostages “Young Boys Abd...
- Al-Shabaab Terrorist Commander killed in Mogadishu
- Fighting for control of Somalia,AMAZING photos ,Th...
- Somalia ‘taken hostage’ by continuing fighting, sa...
- Warships block vessel from rebel-held Somali port
- Insurgent commander killed in Mogadishu
- Swedes Killed Fighting Alongside al-Shabaab in Som...
- Australia joins fight against piracy off Somalia,K...
- Insurgents impose curfew after grenade attack
- ‘Campaign Of Violence’ Against Somali Government
- Somalia: Ethiopia has no plans to go it alone,Soma...
- Eritrean President Issaias Afeworki Talks to Ashar...
- Ahlu Sunnah oo Ceelbuur Korkiisa Dikri ku Qabatay ...
- the power brokers
- Governor Arnold of California Congratulates the Et...
- Somali Insurgency Grows, Roiling President's Peace...
- Desperate Islamic Radicals
- Wedding parties banned in Kismayo,Warships block v...
- Ohio county baffled by costly calls to Somalia
- Mo Farah breaks British 10,000m road record in London
- Thousands flee Mogadishu ahead of war build-up
- Kenya: Military chopper gunned down
- East Africa: Somali Crisis a Genocide, Says Presid...
- Analysis: Somali infighting could help al-Qaida
- Fighting in Somali capital kills 9,Somalia Preside...
- Injured Ugandan soldier evacuated from Somalia to ...
- In Somalia, African Union takes the offensive in i...
- Embassy evacuated after terror threat
- Political and Military Conflict in the Sool, Sanaa...
- Islamists Ban Men And Women to Sit On the Same Sea...
- Eritrea destabilising Somalia, says president
- Jihadists in Kismayo ban filming of weddings, music
- Suicide Bombing in Somalia Raises Concerns About F...
- UN Extends African Peacekeepers' Somalia Mandate,U...
- Sheik Aweys takes over chairmanship of Insurgent g...
- Mogadishu Battle Draws in Foreign Powers
- Troops reinforce Somalia airport
- A member of USS Lake Champlain (CG 57) carries a f...
- For Somalia, Chaos Breeds Religious War
- Obama picks Sonia Sotomayor as Supreme Court pic...
- Jihadists target Somalia
- UN Envoy Visits Mogadishu, Suicide Bomber Was Al S...
- Ethiopia "coup plotters" remanded without charge
- Island sailors held by pirates,Swedish navy heads ...
- Somali Armed Group Says It’s Poised to Defeat Al-S...
- Somali general says insurgents' days are numbered
- Somali war goes hi-tech as militants march on capital
- Fatuma Omar Ismail: A scholar born into squalor
- Kenyan VP calls for military aid for besieged Soma...
- Al-Shabaab gunmen kidnap cleric in Kenya camp
- Al-Shabaab behind suicide attack
- Gov't imposes air, sea blockade in insurgent-run s...
- onwards, Sufi Soldiders:Video
- Kidnapped journalists in Somalia plead for help,AF...
- NATO disarms suspected pirates in Gulf of Aden,Som...
- At least 208 killed in recent Mogadishu fighting
- Somali Government Denies Hard-Line Insurgent Claims
- Rebels claim Somali suicide bomb,Exclusive Photo
- Somali president calls for help in battling Islami...
- Video:U.K and U.S. Muslims waging jihad in Somalia
- Somalia suicide bomb kills seven, BBCVideo
- U.S. anti-terror authorities see Western fighters ...
- Russia's Lavrov discusses anti-piracy with Somali ...
- Somali clerics take up arms against extremists
- Al-Shabaab targets local youth
- FM: Al-Qaeda Fighting Alongside Rebels
- Ahlu Sunna Waljama’a denounces grave destruction i...
- Suicide car bomber kills 7 in Somalia, residents flee
- Dozens of civilians killed in latest Somalia fighting
- Inside Story - Somalia's discord and division ,Jih...
- British and American fighters respond to jihad cal...
- Rights group says 53 Somalis killed in latest figh...
- Fighting rages on in Mogadishu for second day,Terr...
- Somali government launches new offensive
- FBI watching Somali Muslims in D.C.
- Somali Britons trained by al Qaeda pose serious th...
- At Naval Academy, Obama maps fight against terrorism
- African Union calls for Eritrea sanctions,Violence...
- Somali insurgency ringleader arrested in Kenya New...
- Journalist Killed in Mogadishu Fighting, Fighting ...
- Somalia Government Announces Plan to Defeat Insurg...
- Renewed clashes kill 14 in Somalia,Heavy fighting ...
- Pirates: Yo, ho, ho and a million-dollar McMansion...
- Minneapolis Imam Decries ‘the Hell of Living in Am...
-
▼
May
(280)
Al-Qaida in Somalia. ...
We Are Winning the War on Terrorism in Horn of Africa
The threat is from violent extremists who are a small minority of the world's 1.3 billion Muslims, the threat is real. They distort Islam. They kill man, woman and child; Christian and Hindu, Jew and Muslim. They seek to create a repressive caliphate. To defeat this enemy, we must understand who we are fighting against, and what we are fighting for.
No comments:
Post a Comment