By: Mark T Jones
Maansoor Hotel Hargeisa |
For an insight into the land that gets beyond the sugared
rhetoric and contrived communiqués it is essential to venture forth. By so
doing there is a chance of liberation from the sophistry and semantics that
crowd in on one from every official encounter. The country like its inhabitants
delights in being enigmatic and takes real patience and persistence to discover
something of its real self. A land rich in history and enmity, like much of the
Horn, Somaliland baffles and bemuses at every turn.
Stark beauty arrests, indifference infuriates, whilst a
deep well of faith provides a both a salve as well as salvation. Truth like the
galu (plover) is more than not illusive and in so seeking there is always the
chance that what you will come across is the abesi (venomous cobra). Any
peregrinations exact a heavy price, for the heat saps the will, the dust
parches the throat and even when seeking shade from the Dibi or Makari tree it
is important to remember that these trees were once used for making stabbing
spears. Where ever one chooses to rest the modern equivalent of the herio
(baggage saddle) there is a need to be alert for unexpected pleasures, as well
vigilance in regard to heshima (loss of face).
Sadly, even in the largely forgotten regions the khat
addled politics of Hargeisa impacts greatly. Unnecessary grievances are still
being forged and moulded by those whose vocabulary seems to consist of few
words other than Imisa (How much?) and I si I si (give me, give me). Present
and future tragedies are being shaped, with Somalis such as the Gadaboursi
(Samarone) of the Adal/Awdal Region being marginalised, ignored and unheard.
The recent local elections have thrown up some interesting results, none more
so than in the area around the port town of Saylac (known to the wider world as
Zeila) – a strategically located port, long since coveted by Djibouti.
Throughout the Saylac district ten Gadaboursi and seven
Issa councillors have recently been elected. With an Issa councillor having
been mayor for the last eight years, there should now be a change, as the
winning councillors are meant to cast their vote as to who should become Mayor
of Saylac. As the Gadaboursi councillors outnumber the Issa counsellors it is
clear to see that they would provide the winning vote on a Gadaboursi
counsellor becoming Mayor. However, the Issa councillors have not hung around
for this to happen, after being called back by the President of Djibouti, they
have up and left Saylac and returned home to Djibouti, refusing to take part in
any election; branding the whole thing a farce. Historically, the Issa (a clan
that straddles Djibouti and Somaliland) has claimed that the Saylac region
belongs to the Issa and that no one else should be allowed to be the Mayor of
the Saylac region.
The Issa are now claiming the local votes were rigged,
despite the fact that the Chairman of the Election Commission, Secretary and
First Chairman all being Issa and confirming that the electoral process had
been fair and above board. The Issa are outraged at the thought of a Gadaboursi
becoming mayor, they feel the Saylac land belongs to them and they are not
prepared to let anyone else have any control over the area. Such is the
indignation that they are prepared to fight the Gadaboursi people using support
from the Djibouti army and its resources. As if such sabre rattling were not
bad enough, matters have been exacerbated by the actions of President Silanyo
of Somaliland.
On the 16th December 2012 President Silanyo was in
Djibouti to attend the 40th anniversary celebration of the Somali becoming a
written as well as a spoken language. When the event had finished Silanyo had a
private discussion with President Guelleh of Djibouti regarding the Saylac
election.
The ever forceful Guelleh, made clear his displeasure
concerning the result in Saylac election insisted that Silanyo override the
democratic wishes of local people and install an Issa councillor as mayor.
Guelleh went on to threaten President Silanyo, when he
made clear that should this not happen, Djibouti will no longer recognise
Somaliland as a country which had previously been agreed between the two
Presidents. Rather than rebuffing this irredentism on behalf of the Issa,
President Silanyo returned to Hargeisa and ordered the Vice President to ensure
that an Issa was appointed Mayor of Saylac. To his credit the Vice President,
thus far, has refused to do this.
Tribal animosity continues to be the wabayo (a poison
made by boiling the roots of the Waba tree) that corrodes the body politic of
Somali society. Naturally, the Gadaboursi feel that they are entitled to stand
up for their democratic rights and regardless of international indifference,
are determined to be heard. They are horrified at the thought of the Presidents
of Djibouti and Somaliland acting in concert to ride roughshod over the will of
local people.
A clear sense is emerging that they have been caught in
the middle and stifle and suffocated by Guelleh's Issa tribe and Silanyo's
Issaq. The last thing the Horn needs now is the sound of the Giiraar (war
song). The power brokers in Djibouti and Hargeisa would do well to draw back, reassess,
engage and support the regions. Resources, aid and development needs to be
shared an equitable manner, something which manifestly has not been done thus
far. What has been happening in the Adal/Awdal region is a timely reminder that
journalists, NGOs and people of goodwill must make a greater effort to break
out from the cosseted environment of hotels such as the Al-Mansour and discover
what is really taking place.
Mark T Jones
London-based writer and specialist on the Horn of Africa
Below is a clip showing the reactions from the Issa and
Gadaboursi people, to date these clips have not been broadcast which shows that
the voices of Adal/Awdal are being hidden from the international world:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=EVWIBF2hW
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