Saturday, July 22, 2006

SOMALIA

Geography
Somalia, situated in the Horn of Africa, lies along the Gulf of Aden and the Indian Ocean. It is bounded by Djibouti in the northwest, Ethiopia in the west, and Kenya in the southwest. In area it is slightly smaller than Texas. Generally arid and barren, Somalia has two chief rivers, the Shebelle and the Juba.

Government
Between Jan. 1991 and Aug. 2000, Somalia had no working government. A fragile parliamentary government was formed in 2000, but it expired in 2003 without establishing control of the country. In 2004, a new transitional Parliament was instituted and elected a president.

History
From the 7th to the 10th century, Arab and Persian trading posts were established along the coast of present-day Somalia. Nomadic tribes occupied the interior, occasionally pushing into Ethiopian territory. In the 16th century, Turkish rule extended to the northern coast, and the Sultans of Zanzibar gained control in the south.

After British occupation of Aden in 1839, the Somali coast became its source of food. The French established a coal-mining station in 1862 at the site of Djibouti, and the Italians planted a settlement in Eritrea. Egypt, which for a time claimed Turkish rights in the area, was succeeded by Britain. By 1920, a British and an Italian protectorate occupied what is now Somalia. The British ruled the entire area after 1941, with Italy returning in 1950 to serve as United Nations trustee for its former territory.

By 1960, Britain and Italy granted independence to their respective sectors, enabling the two to join as the Republic of Somalia on July 1, 1960. Somalia broke diplomatic relations with Britain in 1963 when the British granted the Somali-populated Northern Frontier District of Kenya to the Republic of Kenya.

On Oct. 15, 1969, President Abdi Rashid Ali Shermarke was assassinated and the army seized power. Maj. Gen. Mohamed Siad Barre, as president of a renamed Somali Democratic Republic, leaned heavily toward the USSR. In 1977, Somalia openly backed rebels in the easternmost area of Ethiopia, the Ogaden Desert, which had been seized by Ethiopia at the turn of the century. Somalia acknowledged defeat in an eight-month war against the Ethiopians that year, having lost much of its 32,000-man army and most of its tanks and planes. President Siad Barre fled the country in late Jan. 1991. His departure left Somalia in the hands of a number of clan-based guerrilla groups, none of which trusted each other.

Africa's worst drought of the century occurred in 1992, and, coupled with the devastation of civil war, Somalia was plunged into a severe famine that killed 300,000. U.S. troops were sent in to protect the delivery of food in Dec. 1992, and in May 1993 the UN took control of the relief efforts from the U.S. The warlord Mohamed Farah Aidid ambushed UN troops and dragged American bodies through the streets, causing an about-face in U.S. willingness to involve itself in the fate of this lawless country. The last of the U.S. troops departed in late March, leaving 19,000 UN troops behind.

Since 1991 Somalia has been engulfed in anarchy. Years of peace negotiations between the various factions were fruitless, and warlords and militias ruled over individual swaths of land. In 1991, a breakaway nation, the Somaliland Republic, proclaimed its independence. Since then several warlords have set up their own ministates in Puntland and Jubaland. Although internationally unrecognized, these states have been peaceful and stable.

In Aug. 2000, a Parliament convened in nearby Djibouti and elected Somalia's first government in nearly a decade. After its first year in office, the government still controlled only 10% of the country, and in Aug. 2003, its mandate expired. In Oct. 2002, new talks to establish a government began; in Aug. 2004 a 275-member transitional Parliament was inaugurated for a five-year term. Parliament selected a national president in September, Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed, the president of the breakaway region of Puntland. The new government, however, spent its first year operating out of Kenya—Somalia remained too violent and unstable to enter—eventually settling in the provincial town of Baidoa.

In May 2006, the country's worst outbreak of violence in 10 years occurred, with Islamist militias battling rival warlords. On June 6, an Islamist militia seized control of the capital, Mogadishu, and established control in much of the south. This was a setback for the Bush administration's controversial policy in the country—as part of its war on terror, the U.S. is widely thought to have covertly backed various warlords against the Islamists, despite the warlords' perpetuation of violence and mayhem throughout the country. The U.S. is concerned that the lawless and chaotic nation will become an al-Qaeda breeding ground, but its support of the now-defeated warlords has deepened the U.S. unpopularity in the country. Although one leader of the Islamists, Sharif Ahmed, has indicated his desire for good relations with the West, another emerging leader, Sheik Hassan Dahir Aweys, is considered a hardliner who wants to turn Somalia into an Islamist state ruled by sharia law. The sheik is barred from entering the U.S. because of his ties to terrorist groups. Somalia's transitional government, led by President Abdullahi Yusuf and situated in Baidoa, remains intact, and has the support of neighboring Ethiopia, which has clashed in the past with Somalia's Islamists. The international community has urged negotiations between the Islamists and the transitional government.


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Atlas: Somalia - Facts on Somalia: flags, maps, geography, history, statistics, disasters current events, and international relations.
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Somalia: History - History Early and Colonial Periods Between the 7th and 10th cent., immigrant Muslim Arabs and ...

1 comment:

Patrick Kluivert Ddiba said...

Of course, It is not like i'm less interested in Africa, but there is no much information about Africa on my specific security issues.