August 7, 2007:
Most of the
400,000 Mogadishu residents who fled the major fighting in
February-April belonged to clans that opposed the new government (which is
supported by clans from outside Mogadishu, and several thousand Ethiopian
troops). Since May, about 120,000 of those refugees returned. But that brought
back many of the Islamic radical clan gunmen who are intent on regaining
control of Mogadishu for their clans. The increased fighting since June has
caused another 30,000 people to flee the city. Now the government and Ethiopian
troops are again clearing out neighborhoods believed to be harboring
terrorists.
The terror campaign in
Mogadishu mainly consists of throwing hand grenades into markets or commercial
buildings, or firing a pistol or assault rifle and fleeing. In some cases,
several truckloads of gunmen will pull up near an Ethiopian base, open fire for
a while, then drive away. There have been a few roadside bombs. The local
terrorists are inspired by what al Qaeda is believed to be doing in Baghdad.
But the Somali terrorists don't have access to the large amounts of explosives,
weapons, cash and technical expertise available in Iraq. So the terrorism in
Mogadishu is much less frequent, and not nearly as deadly. In one respect, the
two situations are similar. The Islamic Courts terrorists are receiving support
from clans that lost out (on monopolies and criminal activities shut down) when
the Transitional Government and Ethiopian troops showed up. It's mainly about
money, with a large dollop of pride. A
major source of weapons, cash and encouragement is Eritrea, which wants to see
Ethiopia get tied down in Somalia and suffer losses there.
The government reconciliation
conference has attracted more hit-and-run attacks, and thousands of people
living near the site of the conference (a large warehouse in an industrial
district) have fled, to escape the frequent fire from troops guarding the
site. The government knows which
neighborhoods the gunmen and terrorists live in, and are now searching homes for
weapons and suspects. The implied threat is that the government and Ethiopian
troops will force large numbers of hostile clan members from the city if the
violence doesn't stop.
The reconciliation conference
is deadlocked because of religious, clan and personal rivalry issues. This has
been the cause of decades, actually centuries, of disunity in the region known
as Somalia. The region has only functioned as a nation for a few decades, after
it was established in the 1960s. This, in turn, was largely the effort of
colonial powers Britain and Italy. That attempt at nation building never really
took, and no one appears to have a solution for that.
The breakaway statelets of
Puntland and Somaliland up north, which have been islands of peace and
prosperity, are also sliding back into the chaos of clan warfare.