From: Berhane Habtemariam (Berhane.Habtemariam@gmx.de)
Date: Sat Apr 17 2010 - 05:21:16 EDT
For Somalis caught between Islamists and weak government, fleeing is only
option
By <http://projects.washingtonpost.com/staff/articles/sudarsan+raghavan/>
Sudarsan Raghavan
Washington Post Foreign Service
Saturday, April 17, 2010
IFO, KENYA -- Two Islamist militants delivered an ultimatum to Zahra
Allawi's daughters: marry them or die. The men were from al-Shabab, a
militia linked to al-Qaeda that is fighting Somalia's U.S.-backed
government. The two girls were 14 and 16.
Allawi said her neighbor in southeastern Somalia received the same command.
But he swiftly married off his daughter to someone else. The next day, the
fighters returned with a butcher's knife.
"They slaughtered him like a goat," she recalled.
Three hours later, she and her 10 children fled. After handing their life
savings of $300 to a smuggler, they crossed into northeastern Kenya last
month, joining tens of thousands of Somalis in this sprawling refugee
settlement. They are the human fallout from Africa's most notorious failed
state, haunted by unending conflict and a quiet U.S. counterterrorism
campaign.
About 2 million Somalis, roughly one-fifth of the population, have sought
refuge in other parts of their country or in neighboring countries, most of
them since 2007, when the fighting intensified. Nearly 170,000 have fled
this year alone, according to U.N. officials, arriving in desolate camps
inside and outside Somalia with barely anything except the clothes on their
backs.
Many are running from al-Shabab's radical dictates and increasing savagery,
as well as fears of a major government offensive.
This article is based on more than 60 interviews conducted in Somali refugee
communities in Kenya and Yemen. The refugees' stories of life under
al-Shabab could not be independently verified, but community leaders,
refugee officials and human rights groups as well as al-Shabab spokesmen
gave similar accounts of recent events in Somalia.
Allawi had plenty of reasons to flee. Al-Shabab fighters, she said, once
whipped her for not attending midday prayers at the mosque. Last month, she
was forced to prove that the man she was walking with was her husband.
An al-Shabab commander also sought to recruit two of Allawi's sons, ages 10
and 13. Allawi begged him not to take them. In exchange, he forced her to
buy three weapons for his force.
"If they could all afford to come, not a single person would remain in
Somalia," said Allawi, 37, seated with her children on the reddish, sunbaked
earth a day after they arrived. "There is no freedom in Somalia, only
death."
Instability since 1991
War has gripped Somalia since 1991, when the collapse of President Mohamed
Siad Barre's regime plunged the country into lawlessness and clan fighting.
Two years later, mobs dragged the bodies of U.S. soldiers through Mogadishu,
the capital, during a U.N. peacekeeping mission, an event later depicted in
the movie "Black Hawk Down."
The country has vexed U.S. policymakers, who fear that Somalia could become
the next
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/world/countries/afghanistan.html?nav=e
l> Afghanistan. In December 2006, the George W. Bush administration
indirectly backed an Ethiopian invasion to overthrow the Islamists, who had
risen up against Somalia's secular warlords.
But within two years, the Islamists returned, more radicalized and led by
al-Shabab, which in Arabic means "The Youth." The Obama administration and
European nations are backing the Somali government with arms, training,
logistics and intelligence.
Yet al-Shabab, which the United States has labeled a terrorist organization,
now controls large swaths of Somalia. It has imposed Taliban-like Islamic
codes in a region where moderate Islam was once widely practiced. Urged on
by Osama bin Laden, the group has steadily pushed into Mogadishu, importing
foreign fighters and triggering U.S. concerns that the movement could spread
to Yemen, across East Africa and beyond. Somalia's government controls only
a few blocks of Mogadishu and has little legitimacy elsewhere.
Many Somalis say they believe the United States is guiding the war.
"We expect American helicopters to strike Mogadishu at any moment," said
Aslia Hassan, 40, who arrived at this refugee settlement three days ago with
two small plastic bags of possessions. "This is why we are running."
Al-Shabab's dictates
The refugees say they are also escaping al-Shabab's puritanical dictates.
Western and Somali music is outlawed in the areas the group controls in
southern and central Somalia. Movie theaters have been shuttered, and the
watching of films on DVDs is prohibited. In some areas, the refugees say,
playing soccer -- and even watching it on television -- is banned. So is
storing pictures on cellphones and using Western-sounding ringtones. Only
Koranic music is allowed.
Al-Shabab's religious police, often led by children, order people to put out
cigarettes and give haircuts at gunpoint to anyone with modern hairstyles or
longish hair, the refugees say. As a warning to those who defy their
dictates, al-Shabab fighters have displayed severed heads on steel poles.
Women must sheath themselves from head to toe in abayas made of thick cloth
and are not allowed to wear bras. In Mogadishu, buses are segregated, with
women sitting in the back.
"Even if a pregnant woman asks to sit in the front of the bus, where it is
less bumpy, she will be refused," said Dahaba Duko Ali, 35.
She arrived here last month with her seven children, evading al-Shabab
checkpoints. Fearing the police -- Kenya has closed its border with Somalia
-- the smugglers drove along back roads and dropped the family just over the
border. Under cover of night, Ali and her children walked 30 miles to Ifo.
Ali Mohamud Raghe, an al-Shabab spokesman, said that "our Islamic religion
tells us" to separate men from women and for women to wear thick abayas. The
militia forbids all "the evil things that infidels aim to spread" among
young Muslim Somalis.
"So music is among the evil actions," he said in a telephone interview.
Even donkeys are not beyond al-Shabab's dictates. The militia has decreed
that donkeys cannot wear harnesses, nor can they carry more than six sacks.
They are also segregated: Women can use only female donkeys; men must use
male ones. "How can I feed my children?" lamented Hassan Ali Ibrahim, 40, a
gaunt donkey-cart driver who arrived in Yemen with his eight children.
On a Friday in October, the Ibrahim brothers -- Sayeed and Osman -- were
taken from their prison cell in the coastal Somali town of Kismaayo. An
al-Shabab court had convicted them of robbery, they said, adding that their
imprisonment was politically motivated.
The brothers and a third inmate were driven in a minibus to a field in front
of a police station. A crowd of 4,000 had gathered. Ten masked men stood in
the field; one held a microphone and another clutched a knife, the brothers
recalled.
The third inmate, in his early 20s, was taken out of the van. Several of the
masked men held him down and his foot was chopped off above the ankle, the
brothers recalled.
It took five minutes.
"God is great," chanted the fighters, drowning out the screams.
Minutes later, the brothers were taken out of the van. Sayeed looked away as
his brother's leg was sliced off.
"I felt powerless," Sayeed said. "I wanted a miracle to happen."
A voice over the loudspeaker announced that Sayeed's right hand and left leg
were to be amputated. By the time his limbs were hacked off, he had passed
out. He woke up in a hospital. After 10 days, the brothers fled Kismaayo. In
February, relatives hid them inside a crowded minibus and smuggled them into
Kenya.
"What they did to us has nothing to do with Islam," said Osman, as he
struggled to get up from a chair with his crutches.
But Mohammed Muse Gouled, 70, said al-Shabab had helped bring stability. For
years, he said, warlords contested for power and territory, and chaos and
insecurity grew. "No one can harm you under the Shabab," said Gouled, adding
that he fled shelling by the regional African Union peacekeeping force.
Habiba Abdi, 19, was five months pregnant and unmarried. Under the dictates
of al-Shabab, she would have faced death by stoning. Fighters entered her
neighborhood in Kismaayo, searching for the woman with the "illegal child."
She hid with relatives. Four days later, she begged a smuggler to take her
to Kenya. A few months later, she had a baby girl. She named her Sabreen,
which means "tolerance."
They live here with a cousin. Other refugees taunt her as the "one who broke
the law of Islam." Some call her dhilo, or whore.
But she is more worried about al-Shabab. Last year, fighters from the
militia crossed into Kenya and abducted three aid workers and a Somali
cleric; last week, the group raided a Kenyan border town.
"Sometimes, I prefer to die," said Abdi, as she cradled Sabreen in her arms.
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Video
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/video/2010/04/05/VI20100405043
98.html>
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<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/video/2010/04/05/VI20100405043
98.html> Somali refugees tell of public amputations
Sayeed Ibrahim and his brother were accused of being thieves by al-Shabab,
an Islamist movement in Somalia linked to al-Qaeda. The group then publicly
amputated an arm and leg. Ibrahim now lives in Ifo, a refugee camp in
northeastern Kenya.
>
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/video/2010/04/05/VI20100405043
98.html> LAUNCH VIDEO PLAYER
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