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Zman
06-15-2007, 02:26 PM
:sl:/Peace To All


Somalis Yearn For Islamic Rulers To Return and Tame The Warlords

By Steve Bloomfield in Marere,
Southern Somalia
Published: 15 June 2007
Independent

..."Maybe one day someone will rebuild it," said Abdirizak Hassan Moalim, squinting into the sun.

The 21-year-old has been living in a village near the sugar factory for two months after fleeing the violence in Somalia's capital Mogadishu.

"It needs to be safe here first though," he added.

"There was a chance under the Courts, but now, I don't know."

Six months after the fall of Somalia's Union of Islamic Courts (UIC), insecurity has returned to the country.

...The UIC controlled Marere and the neighbouring district of Jilib for just three months at the end of last year...

Local people, from teen-agers to elders, now talk of the brief period of rule by the Islamic Courts in wistful tones.

For the first time in a generation, there was a level of security in the district that few had believed was possible.

The various clan-based militias which terrorised the region, setting up checkpoints and settling disputes with guns, buried their arms.

Before the Courts' arrival, there had been nine roadblocks along the route from Marere to Kismaayo, a port town roughly 100 miles away. Controlled by individual militia groups, they demanded money from everyone who passed.

Under the Courts, the roadblocks disappeared.

The effect was immediate.

The price of food in Marere fell as traders travelling from Kismaayo no longer had to factor in the cost of roadblocks.

The cost of travelling between Marere and Kismaayo also fell - from 100,000 shillings to just 30,000. One commodity increased in price: cigarettes.

The Courts banned smoking, along with the chewing of khat, a mild narcotic popular throughout Somalia. The price of a packet of cigarettes rose from 6,000 shillings to 20,000.

But strict conservative policies like this began to erode much of the UIC's popular support in Mogadishu.

With the demise of the Courts, the militias have dug up their weapons and the checkpoints and insecurity have returned.

A vehicle belonging to Médicins Sans Frontières (MSF) was shot at two weeks ago. MSF, which runs a hospital and feeding centre in Marere, was forced to evacuate its small team of expatriate staff.

"If the Islamic Courts came back, not just this area but the whole of Somalia will be safer," said Mohammed Abdullahi Gure, chairman of Marere elders' committee.

"People used to fear the Islamic Courts. The government does not have the holy Koran so they do not fear them."

The UIC's presence in Marere district was limited, but effective, Mr Gure said. A commander was appointed, based in the village of Gududey.

He had just one technical - the souped-up 4x4s armed with machine guns - and a handful of soldiers, but few were prepared to risk committing a crime.

"There wasn't a militia man who would move with guns," said Mr Gure.

"They feared because they were told the Islamic Courts forces would have the Holy Koran as their guide."

Without the sharia law which the UIC imposed, Mr Gure and his committee of elders are unable to keep the peace.

There is no system of justice in Marere. The men who shot at MSF were forced to write a letter apologising for their actions but they continue to live freely in the community.

The weak transitional government is now entering its sixth month based in Mogadishu but it is still struggling to assert its authority, reliant on the support of Ethiopian troops...

Complete Report:
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/...cle2659721.ece
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AHMED_GUREY
06-15-2007, 03:37 PM
The Courts banned smoking, along with the chewing of khat, a mild narcotic popular throughout Somalia. The price of a packet of cigarettes rose from 6,000 shillings to 20,000.

But strict conservative policies like this began to erode much of the UIC's popular support in Mogadishu.
the ordinary people do not care about this silly innocent plant called 'khat' who's effect is nothing compared to the hard drugs which is not present in Somalia but is circulating in the US and Europe

What they do care about is how the world allowed this 'Transitional' government to massacre 1500 innocent civilians by shelling heavily populated resident areas, and displace more 300 thousand civilians that's more than what is happening in Darfur or Iraq and all of this happened on the watch of the so-called UN,EU,US,AU

All of them are/were supporting this treacherous government and not once did they condemn these war crimes. this will come back to hunt them, the Islamic courts might have been defeated because there entity when it comes to military power was still in it's infancy but they left behind an enormous awareness amongst ordinary Somalis that Islam is indeed the only way out of this Anarchy and trust me the next Islamic government will not make the same errors and will be prepared! Insha-allah
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Zulkiflim
06-15-2007, 05:40 PM
Salaam,

Such are thea ction of the western backed goverment in the muslim world.

Instead of championing their people right,they would rather kill them.

Look at Lebanon,the Leaders,cried and begged for aid from their western masters,while the western world kept on bombing.
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snakelegs
06-16-2007, 12:27 AM
i see parallels here with afghanistan. the right to smoke khat means nothing if you don't have any security. this is why many in afghanistan welcomed the taliban.
in any case i hope that somalia finds peace at last - islamic or not-islamic.
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al-muslimah
06-17-2007, 04:34 PM
yeah the UIC were very religious and strict and masha'allah when i first heard that they took control i was jumping up and down.that ugly transitional government is useless i'm serious.abdullahi yusuf should have been the first person the UIC should have executed in public.alllah almighty will give us our strength we once had don't worry.this is only a temporary state we're in(all muslims)
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Zman
06-17-2007, 07:06 PM
:sl:

Time is on the UIC's side...
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Zman
06-19-2007, 06:35 PM
:sl:/Peace To All


'Kill Anyone Still Alive': American Special Ops In Somalia

By Chris Floyd
Wednesday, 13 June 2007
The Baltimore Chronicle

Wednesday, 13 June 2007—How many people did American forces actually kill when they attacked refugees fleeing from the U.S.-backed Ethiopian invasion of Somalia last January?

We know from reports by Oxfam, the Guardian, the Associated Press and Reuters that dozens of innocent civilians were slaughtered near the Kenyan border, including villagers and nomadic tribesmen hit by American gunships seeking to kill alleged al Qaeda operatives who may or may not have been among the refugees.

But a new story in Esquire magazine -- detailing the creation of America's most recent military satrapy, the Africa Command -- provides disturbing indications that the post-invasion killing by American operatives in Somalia was far more extensive -- and deliberate -- than previously known. [Extensive background on the war in Somalia can be found here.]

The Esquire piece, by Thomas Barnett, is a mostly glowing portrait of the Africa Command, which, we are told, is designed to wed military, diplomatic, and development prowess in a seamless package, a whole new way of projecting American power: "pre-emptive nation-building instead of pre-emptive regime change," or as Barnett describes it at another point, "Iraq done right."

Although Barnett's glib, jargony, insider piece -- told entirely from the point of view of U.S. military officials -- does contain bits of critical analysis, it is in no way an expose.

The new details he presents on the post-invasion slaughter are thus even more chilling, as they are offered simply as an acceptable, ordinary aspect of this laudable new enterprise.

Barnett reveals that the gunship attacks on refugees were just the first part of the secret U.S. mission that was "Africa Command's" debut on the imperial stage.


Soon after the attacks,

"Task Force 88, a very secret American special-operations unit," was helicoptered into the strike area.

As Barnett puts it: "The 88's job was simple: Kill anyone still alive and leave no unidentified bodies behind."
Some 70,000 people fled their homes in the first wave of the Ethiopian invasion. (More than 400,000 fled the brutal consolidation of the invasion in Mogadishu last spring.) Tens of thousands of these initial refugees headed toward the Kenyan border, where the American gunships struck.

When the secret operation was leaked, Bush Administration officials said that American planes were trying to hit three alleged al Qaeda operatives who had allegedly been given sanctuary by the Islamic Councils government decapitated by the Ethiopians.

But Barnett's insiders told him that the actual plan was to wipe out thousands of "foreign fighters" whom Pentagon officials believed had joined the Islamic Courts forces.


"Honestly, nobody had any idea just how many there really were," Barnett was told.

"But we wanted to get them all."
Thus the Kenyan border area -- where tens of thousands of civilians were fleeing -- was meant to be "a killing zone,"


Barnett writes:

America's first AC-130 gunship went wheels-up on January 7 from that secret Ethiopian airstrip. After each strike, anybody left alive was to be wiped out by successive waves of Ethiopian commandos and Task Force 88, operating out of Manda Bay. The plan was to rinse and repeat 'until no more bad guys, as one officer put it.
At this point, Barnett -- or his sources -- turn coy.

We know there were multiple gunship strikes; and from Barnett's account, we know that the "88s" did go in at least once after the initial gunship attack to "kill anyone still alive and leave no unidentified bodies behind."

But Barnett's story seems to suggest that once active American participation in the war was leaked, the "killing zone" was abandoned at some point. So there is no way of knowing at this point how many survivors of the American attacks were then killed by the "very special secret special-operations unit," or how many "rinse-and-repeat" cycles the "88s" were able to carry out in what Barnett called "a good plan."

Nor do we know just who the "88s" killed. As noted, the vast majority of refugees were civilians, just as the majority of the victims killed by the American gunship raids were civilians. Did the "88s" move in on the nomadic tribesmen decimated by the air attack and "kill everyone still alive"? Or did they restrict themselves to killing any non-Somalis they found among the refugees?


Concerning the latter, evidently it is now a capital crime, worthy of instant death by special ops or air raid or drone-fired missile, for any Muslim of any nationality to visit or take part in an Islamic regime which the U.S. government dislikes -- even if, like Somalia's Islamic Councils government, that regime is not at war with the United States and strenuously denies any connection to al Qaeda.
This is borne out by the "good plan" to kill "thousands of foreign fighters" who had, allegedly, come to the aid of the Islamic Courts government (just like the thousands of foreign fighters who joined the American-backed jihad against the Soviets in Afghanistan).

There was an automatic, unquestioned assumption by the Pentagon that these people were to be wiped out to the last man.

This does not seem to jibe very well with "Africa Command's" professed intent to win the hearts and minds of Africa's Muslims and prevent encroachment by extremists there.

But then, none of Bush's "Terror War" policies seem designed to produce their ostensible goal.

Indeed, a cynic might be forgiven for suspecting that the formenting of extremism, violence and endless, ever-profitable war was in fact the actual aim of these policies.

UPDATE:
Bush's Terror Warriors are planning more airstrikes in Somalia, this time in the northern region of Puntland, a follow-up to shelling by American warships in the area last week, AFP reports. (Via Raw Story)


US warplanes are overflying the northern Somali region of Puntland in preparation for air-strikes against suspected Al-Qaeda fugitives, more than a week after US warships shelled the area, officials said Tuesday. The semi-autonomous regional government had authorised the overflights to pursue Al-Qaeda members believed to be hiding in the moutainous area, Puntland's security minister Ibrahim Artan Ismail told reporters.


"The warplanes are looking for Al-Qaeda hideouts and when they get them, they will bomb them," he said, adding that the air operation covers areas where intelligence shows Al-Qaeda elements are hiding.
Once again, we see the identification of any Muslim on the outs with the Bushists and their allies as "al Qaeda." First, the Bush Administration said there were three al Qaeda operatives in Somalia -- the ones they killed 70 or more innocent civilians trying to get in January airstrikes.


As we've seen in the Esquire story above, the aim was actually to kill thousands of Muslims who had joined with the now-deposed Islamic Courts Council government in Somalia, which had strenuously denied ties to al Qaeda.

It's now apparent that anyone who ever fought for the Islamic Courts Council, whether foreign or Somali, will be tarred with the "al Qaeda" brush.
No doubt, the brutal destruction of the broad-based Courts government -- which had brought Somalia its first measure of stability in more than 15 years of violent anarchy -- will in fact spur the rise of al Qaeda-related groups in Somalia, feeding on the chaos and despair engendered by the Bush-backed invasion.


Thus, American forces will always have a handy excuse for striking Somalia whenever they please, as they strive to "project dominance" over Africa.
With the new airstrikes coming in Puntland, however, the questions arise: How many innocent civilians will be murdered by the blunderbuss assault? And will these attacks too be followed by the "88s" dropping in to kill everyone still alive? Is this another "rinse and repeat" cycle from Africa Command?

Chris Floyd is an American journalist. His work has appeared in print and online in venues all over the world, including the Nation, CounterPunch, Columbia Journalism Review, the Christian Science Monitor, Il Manifesto, the Moscow Times and many others.

He is the author of Empire Burlesque: High Crimes and Low Comedy in the Bush Imperium, and is co-founder and editor of the "Empire Burlesque" political blog. He can be reached at cfloyd72@gmail.com .

This column originally appeared on Chris Floyd's site, and is republished here with the permission of the author.

Source:
http://baltimorechronicle.com/2007/061307Floyd.shtml
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