From: Biniam Tekle (biniamt@dehai.org)
Date: Mon Jul 19 2010 - 10:29:53 EDT
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/07/17/AR2010071702652.html?nav=emailpage
Rising civilian toll ignites anger at African force as it battles Somali
militants
By Sudarsan Raghavan
Sunday, July 18, 2010; A10
MOGADISHU, SOMALIA -- An African Union peacekeeping force, funded by
hundreds of millions of dollars from the United States and its allies, has
killed, wounded and displaced hundreds of Somali civilians in a stepped-up
campaign against Islamist militants, according to medical officials, human
rights activists and victims.
Led by Ugandan and Burundian troops, the force has intensified shelling in
recent weeks as Somalia's al-Shabab militia, which is linked to al-Qaeda,
has pushed closer toward the fragile government's seat of power. The shells
are landing in heavily populated areas, in some cases even neighborhoods
controlled by the government. Al-Shabab leaders say the peacekeepers and the
shelling are the key reasons it bombed two venues in Uganda's capital last
Sunday, killing 76 people watching broadcasts of the World Cup final.
In this war-torn capital, Fatima Umar and Muse Haji were among the latest
victims. An artillery shell crashed into their building, killing Umar on the
top floor and Haji on the bottom floor. Umar, 15, was a cleaner who earned
$7 a month to support her parents. Haji, 38, was a shopkeeper who was
relaxing on his stoop on his day off.
Witnesses said the shell was fired from the direction of the airport, which
the peacekeepers control. "It was the Ugandans," declared Omar Sharif, a
clan elder, as he stood in the rubble next to a shattered bed splattered
with Umar's blood. Sunlight glared through a huge hole in the wall.
"When one kilogram of mortars are fired by al-Shabab, AMISOM replies with
100 kilograms of artillery," said Abdulqadir Haji, director of a volunteer
ambulance service, using the acronym for the African Union force. "It is
America and the West who support them. America and the West are the silent
killers in Somalia's war."
The mounting civilian toll is breeding popular resentment that threatens to
undermine Somalia's U.S.-backed government, complicating Washington's
efforts to combat Islamist militancy in an area where al-Qaeda's affiliates
are increasingly posing a threat to U.S. interests and regional stability as
they export jihad across borders.
The bombings in Uganda, which also killed one American, were the first major
al-Shabab strikes outside Somalia. They show that the African Union shelling
campaign has done little to weaken the militia, which is seeking to
overthrow the government and establish a Taliban-like Islamist emirate.
Al-Shabab's top leader, Mukhtar Abdurahman Abu Zubeyr, vowed more attacks
against Uganda if its troops do not leave Somalia. In an audiotape message,
he said the peacekeepers have "committed a nasty massacre," including
"constant shelling at poor civilian populations" that he said was worse than
when American troops were here in 1993 during an ill-fated U.N. peacekeeping
mission.
Human shields alleged
The peacekeepers deny using disproportionate force and say they exercise
maximum restraint, even when they are in imminent danger of attack. They say
al-Shabab uses civilians as human shields and in some cases has fired mortar
shells at civilians and blamed the peacekeepers.
"AMISOM has never shelled indiscriminately at civilians," said Gaffel
Nkolokosa, a spokesman for the force. "Peacekeepers have always avoided
civilian shellings and observe international humanitarian laws."
Last week, Uganda announced plans to send 2,000 more troops to Somalia to
support the 5,000 already there.
Somali government officials welcome the peacekeeping mission but expressed
concern about the civilian deaths.
"We are in a dilemma," said Abdirahman Omar Osman, Somalia's minister of
information. "For us, al-Shabab is trying to do everything it can to get rid
of the government. But when we defend ourselves from al-Shabab, civilians
get caught in the middle. We do not want one civilian to die."
Mark Zimmer, a public affairs officer for Somalia at the U.S. Embassy in
Nairobi, said Washington is "proactive" in trying to prevent the
peacekeepers from "inadvertently targeting civilians and increasing their
sensitivity to avoiding civilian casualties." But he noted that "al-Shabab
has increased attacks of late, forcing AMISOM to respond."
The United States said Thursday that it would increase its support of the
mission.
Most Somalis loathe al-Shabab for its brutality and repressive dictates. But
they say the peacekeeping force should be held responsible for its actions.
"The people are saying, 'What is the difference between AMISOM and
al-Shabab?' " said Hassan Elmi, a peace activist who lives near the airport
and says he hears as many as 200 to 300 shells being fired each day. "You
are killing me. And they are also killing me."
'I want my father'
At Mogadishu's Madina Hospital, the Gailani brothers lay next to each other
on beds. Tubes ran from 12-year-old Sharif's arms; a thick bandage covered
his stomach. Motionless, he stared blankly at the ceiling. Ten-year-old
Mohamed's right arm and leg were bandaged. In a soft, crackling voice, he
struggled to explain what happened.
"I was watching my brother play," he began. "I heard a crash. Then I felt
pain and fell down."
Mohamed stopped talking, as if he had returned to that moment and then began
to sob uncontrollably. "I want my father," he cried out.
Moments later, Gailani Mohammed Abdallah arrived and comforted his son. The
shell, he said, had come from the direction of the airport.
The hallway outside overflowed with patients, most with injuries from the
shelling. Mogadishu's two main hospitals, Madina and Keysane, have treated
more than 3,000 civilians with war-related wounds this year, including 1,250
women and children, according to the International Committee of the Red
Cross. At this rate, the number of wounded civilians is on track to exceed
last year's total of 5,087.
The African Union peacekeepers arrived in Mogadishu in 2007, funded in part
by $185 million from the United States over the past 19 months. They filled
a void left when the United Nations decided not to send its own peacekeepers
after the withdrawal of Ethiopian troops, who had invaded Somalia in late
2006 to tamp down an Islamist uprising. That invasion, covertly backed by
the United States, led to the rise al-Shabab, which fought back the
Ethiopians.
Today, al-Shabab controls large swaths of southern and central Somalia. The
government -- the 14th since Somalia descended into chaos after dictator
Mohamed Siad Barre was ousted in 1991 -- controls a sliver of the capital.
Over four days in the capital last week, this reporter heard as many as 20
shells being fired from one African Union peacekeeping position every day.
"Whenever the enemy are gathering on the front lines, they shell the area,"
said Mohammed Jimal, a government military commander. "It helps the
government.
"There are civilian casualties. No one can deny this," he added,
indifferently.
As he spoke, the sharp whistle of a burst of artillery echoed across the
capital.
The shell that killed Umar and Haji also wounded 4-year-old Abdullah
Gailani, who was recovering at the hospital. A bandage covered the shrapnel
that had pierced his back. Next door, 9-year-old Hassan Muneye sat in a
chair. He was playing soccer when he heard a whistle and then a crash, and
then felt a sharp pain in his leg.
"We will never play outside again," Muneye said. "Perhaps we'll hear another
whistle."
Neighborhood leaders have demanded compensation for their losses. So far,
neither the African Union nor the government has sent an official to visit
their neighborhood.
"Our lives have no value," said Ali Amin Hadji, a clan elder. "We have been
forgotten."
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