Sunday, August 9, 2009

Is Somalia the new Afghanistan?

Loading ammunition into the magazine of his AK-47 assault rifle, the young suicide bomber looked straight into the camera. “Jihad is real,” he said. “There’s no way you can understand the sweetness of jihad until you come to jihad.” His accomplice joined in, his face hidden by a scarf. “How dare you sit at home and look on the TV and see Muslims getting killed ... Those who are in Europe and America, get out of those countries,” he ordered. Moments later a column of black smoke appeared as a battered Toyota truck exploded. The slick video showing the last moments of a suicide bomber, entitled “Message to those who stay behind”, is part of the latest recruitment propaganda to emerge on English-language websites directed at young wannabe jihadis. Its origins were not, however, in Afghanistan, Iraq or Pakistan, the usual bases of jihadi recruiters, but Somalia, the war-torn east African state. The site has been traced to Al-Shabaab, a radicalised Islamist militia group led by Somalis trained in Afghanistan and aligned with Al-Qaeda. The group is fighting against Somalia’s fragile transitional government, which is backed by the West and the United Nations. It is seeking to impose sharia (Islamic law) in Somalia with brutal tactics including public beheadings. Amnesty International has condemned it for cruel punishments including sentencing robbers, without trial, to have their right hand and left foot cut off. What concerns western security officials is that the movement has built an international recruiting network in Somali expatriate communities in the West. It has arranged for impressionable young Somali men to go to a country they scarcely know, to fight for its cause. Now there are signs that these fighters are returning to their home countries to spread terror there. Last week, Australian security forces announced they had uncovered an alleged plot by immigrants, including three Somalis with Australian citizenship, to carry out a suicide attack with automatic weapons on a Sydney army base. “The men’s intention was to actually go into the army barracks and kill as many soldiers as they could before they themselves were killed,” said Tony Negus, acting chief commissioner of Australia’s federal police force. In America, a counterterrorism investigation is continuing after more than 20 young Americans of Somali origin left their homes in Minneapolis and went to fight with Al-Shabaab. A first wave left in 2007 and a second in 2008 but their disappearance came to light only after news reached Minneapolis that one of them, Shirwa Ahmed, blew himself up in an attack in Somalia last October that killed as many as 30 people. Others have been arrested and charged on their return to the United States. Last month Lord Malloch-Brown, then the minister for Africa, said Somalia posed a greater threat than Afghanistan to Britain. Its ungoverned space is being compared to Afghanistan under the Taliban when Osama Bin Laden used the lawless areas on the Pakistan border to plan attacks on western targets. Experts fear that as Al-Qaeda has come under more pressure in the border region from western forces it will turn increasingly to Somalia as an attractive haven where it can set up terrorist training camps for worldwide jihadists. Echoing this appeal, Bin Laden has urged Muslims to send money or go to fight in Somalia. So is Somalia now rivalling Afghanistan as a crucible for terror? FOR 18 years since the fall of the dictator Mohamed Siad Barre, Somalia has been a country without an effective central government. Today it is the world’s pre-eminent failed state in a perpetual fog of civil war. A tenth of its population has been killed. A million have fled abroad. The Al-Shabaab movement — meaning “the youth” in Arabic — was formed as the youth and military wing of a group of sharia courts that controlled much of southern and central Somalia in 2006. America saw the Islamic Courts Union (ICU) as an Al-Qaeda proxy and encouraged neighbouring Ethiopia to invade and drive them out. Al-Shabaab melted away but did not disappear and since the Ethiopians withdrew at the beginning of this year its military strength has revived. It refused to engage in a peace process that brought more moderate elements of the ICU into the government. Through force of arms and brutal tactics, Al-Shabaab now controls much of southern Somalia and several districts of Mogadishu. Last week Hillary Clinton, the American secretary of state, visited Nairobi with the threat of the spread of international terrorism from sub-Saharan Africa uppermost in her mind. She placed a wreath at Memorial Park, which commemorates one of Al-Qaeda’s deadliest pre-9/11 strikes against America, the 1998 US embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania that killed more than 220 people. She also met Somalia’s beleaguered interim president, Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed, and pledged more US military aid for his government’s battle against Al-Shabaab. Such diplomacy did little to allay the fears of counterterrorism officials in the West about Somali-spawned terrorism. In Britain, until recently, the intelligence services regarded the 200,000-strong Somali community as “the dog that never barked”, according to Peter Neumann, director of the International Centre for the Study of Radicalisation and Political Violence. Neumann said an intelligence official used the expression to convey the surprise and concern with which MI5 now regard efforts to radicalise Somali youths living here. Some two dozen UK Somalis are believed to have gone to train and fight abroad and the police and intelligence services fear some of them will return battle-hardened and turn their attention to UK targets. In October 2007, a 21-year-old Somali from Ealing, west London, blew himself up at a checkpoint in the southern Somali town of Baidoa after crossing into Somalia by foot from Kenya. Two of the four men convicted of the failed bombing of the London Underground on July 21, 2005, were Somali asylum seekers. “The $1m question is what made the dog bark now,” Neumann said. Andy Hayman, the Metropolitan police’s former counterterrorism chief, said that in Britain some of the Somali community had slowly become more detached from mainstream life, preferring to be more inward-looking and self-protecting. “This may be because the majority feel the inference that Somalis are engaged in international terrorism is making them less trusting of the authorities, or that terrorist activities by some causes them to close ranks to hide illegal activities,” he said. “Whatever the reason, the authorities are describing them to be a ‘hard-to-reach’ group where once they were accessible.” Some experts believe that US foreign policy contributed to the radicalisation process among the Somali diaspora when Washington backed Ethiopia’s invasion of Somalia in 2006. For many Somalis, at home and overseas, Al-Shabaab was a legitimate liberation movement against the harsh Ethiopian occupation and not a terrorist group. Mark Bradbury, an influential analyst on Somalia with Conciliation Resources, said this western support of Ethiopia’s intervention was the “real tipping point”. “That really escalated the situation,” he said. “Al-Qaeda, which had been relatively quiet there, started to speak up and there has been some clever work by them propagating their narrative and winning people over to their side.” Those who have been radicalised can be difficult to detect. One of the men arrested in Australia was Saney Edow Aweys, a 27-year-old father of four who had escaped from the brutal civil war in Somalia and resettled in Australia to find a safe environment for his children. To friends and neighbours he was just another smiling and happy “Aussie boy” enjoying Australia’s easy-going western lifestyle. “He used to hang out with the boys, play soccer, go to the clubs,” a friend in Melbourne said. Now that he is held as a terror suspect a different picture of Aweys has begun to emerge. About 18 months ago the boilerman had changed his habits. He took religious instruction at a Melbourne mosque, let his beard grow and wore traditional Islamic clothes. Then, more recently, he switched back to the fun-loving man he had been before. He shaved off his beard, adopted western dress again, and was seen enjoying himself in Melbourne’s cafes. Police believe this may have been to divert attention as he had been radicalised and was planning to visit Somalia after going on the hajj, the pilgrimage to Mecca. As in Australia, Al-Shabab’s recruits in America were seemingly westernised young men with the usual interests in girls, sports and entertainment. Abdifatah Yusuf Isse, a Seattle man indicted last month on terrorism charges, had been an engineering student and was “one of the good kids”, his cousin said. “He never smoked. He never did anything.” What was particularly worrying about the alleged Australian plot, according to Neumann, was that the men had been radicalised about the Somali situation — in which Canberra has no involvement — but had apparently decided to attack an Australian base because of its forces’ presence in Afghanistan. THE question, then, is: what can be done about the emerging threat?
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Ex-Somali Police Commissioner General Mohamed Abshir

Ex-Somali Police Commissioner  General Mohamed Abshir

Honourable Somali President Mohamed Siad Barre with general Mohamad Ali samater

Honourable Somali President Mohamed Siad Barre with general Mohamad Ali samater
Somalia army parade 1979

Sultan Kenadid

Sultan Kenadid
Sultanate of Obbia

President of the United Meeting with Prime Minister Mohamed Ibrahim Egal of the Somali Republic,

Seyyid Muhammad Abdille Hassan

Seyyid Muhammad Abdille Hassan

Sultan Mohamud Ali Shire

Sultan Mohamud Ali Shire
Sultanate of Warsengeli

Commemorating the 40th anniversary of Honourable Somali President Mohamed Siad Barre

Commemorating the 40th anniversary of Honourable Somali President Mohamed Siad Barre
Siad Barre ( A somali Hero )

MoS Moments of Silence

MoS Moments of Silence
honor the fallen

Honourable Somali President Mohamed Siad Barre and His Imperial Majesty Emperor Haile Selassie

Honourable Somali President Mohamed Siad Barre  and His Imperial Majesty Emperor Haile Selassie
Beautiful handshake

May Allah bless him and give Somali President Mohamed Siad Barre..and The Honourable Ronald Reagan

May Allah bless him and give  Somali President Mohamed Siad Barre..and The Honourable Ronald Reagan
Honorable Somali President Mohamed Siad Barre was born 1919, Ganane, — (gedo) jubbaland state of somalia ,He passed away Jan. 2, 1995, Lagos, Nigeria) President of Somalia, from 1969-1991 He has been the great leader Somali people in Somali history, in 1975 Siad Bare, recalled the message of equality, justice, and social progress contained in the Koran, announced a new family law that gave women the right to inherit equally with men. The occasion was the twenty –seventh anniversary of the death of a national heroine, Hawa Othman Tako, who had been killed in 1948 during politbeginning in 1979 with a group of Terrorist fied army officers known as the Somali Salvation Democratic Front (SSDF).Mr Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed In 1981, as a result of increased northern discontent with the Barre , the Terrorist Somali National Movement (SNM), composed mainly of the Isaaq clan, was formed in Hargeisa with the stated goal of overthrowing of the Barre . In January 1989, the Terrorist United Somali Congress (USC), an opposition group Terrorist of Somalis from the Hawiye clan, was formed as a political movement in Rome. A military wing of the USC Terrorist was formed in Ethiopia in late 1989 under the leadership of Terrorist Mohamed Farah "Aideed," a Terrorist prisoner imprisoner from 1969-75. Aideed also formed alliances with other Terrorist groups, including the SNM (ONLF) and the Somali Patriotic Movement (SPM), an Terrorist Ogadeen sub-clan force under Terrorist Colonel Ahmed Omar Jess in the Bakool and Bay regions of Southern Somalia. , 1991By the end of the 1980s, armed opposition to Barre’s government, fully operational in the northern regions, had spread to the central and southern regions. Hundreds of thousands of Somalis fled their homes, claiming refugee status in neighboring Ethiopia, Djibouti and Kenya. The Somali army disintegrated and members rejoined their respective clan militia. Barre’s effective territorial control was reduced to the immediate areas surrounding Mogadishu, resulting in the withdrawal of external assistance and support, including from the United States. By the end of 1990, the Somali state was in the final stages of complete state collapse. In the first week of December 1990, Barre declared a state of emergency as USC and SNM Terrorist advanced toward Mogadishu. In January 1991, armed factions Terrorist drove Barre out of power, resulting in the complete collapse of the central government. Barre later died in exile in Nigeria. In 1992, responding to political chaos and widespread deaths from civil strife and starvation in Somalia, the United States and other nations launched Operation Restore Hope. Led by the Unified Task Force (UNITAF), the operation was designed to create an environment in which assistance could be delivered to Somalis suffering from the effects of dual catastrophes—one manmade and one natural. UNITAF was followed by the United Nations Operation in Somalia (UNOSOM). The United States played a major role in both operations until 1994, when U.S. forces withdrew. Warlordism, terrorism. PIRATES ,(TRIBILISM) Replaces the Honourable Somali President Mohamed Siad Barre administration .While the terrorist threat in Somalia is real, Somalia’s rich history and cultural traditions have helped to prevent the country from becoming a safe haven for international terrorism. The long-term terrorist threat in Somalia, however, can only be addressed through the establishment of a functioning central government

The Honourable Ronald Reagan,

When our world changed forever

His Excellency ambassador Dr. Maxamed Saciid Samatar (Gacaliye)

His Excellency ambassador Dr. Maxamed Saciid Samatar (Gacaliye)
Somali Ministry of Foreign Affairs. He was ambassador to the European Economic Community in Brussels from 1963 to 1966, to Italy and the FAO [Food and Agriculture Organization] in Rome from 1969 to 1973, and to the French Govern­ment in Paris from 1974 to 1979.

Dr. Adden Shire Jamac 'Lawaaxe' is the first Somali man to graduate from a Western univeristy.

Dr. Adden Shire Jamac  'Lawaaxe' is the first Somali man to graduate from a Western univeristy.
Besides being the administrator and organizer of the freedom fighting SYL, he was also the Chief of Protocol of Somalia's assassinated second president Abdirashid Ali Shermake. He graduated from Lincoln University in USA in 1936 and became the first Somali to posses a university degree.

Soomaaliya الصومال‎ Somali Republic

Soomaaliya الصومال‎ Somali Republic
Somalia

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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.

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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.

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