By JOHN F. BURNS
LONDON — Citing a “specific threat to Westerners,” the British government issued a warning on Sunday for any of its citizens living in Somaliland to flee the breakaway territory that lies between Ethiopia and the Gulf of Aden, on the northern tip of the Horn of Africa.
The notice came only days after Britain and other European nations issued urgent warnings
to their citizens to leave the Libyan city of Benghazi, 2,500 miles
northwest of Somaliland, because of what Britain described as “a
specific, imminent threat to Westerners.”
A person who has been briefed on the new British warning said that a terrorist organization, most likely the Shabab,
had threatened to kidnap foreigners in Hargeisa, the capital of
Somaliland. As the Shabab fighters have been routed from parts of
Somalia by African Union forces, many have moved north, to Somaliland
and the semiautonomous Puntland region of northeastern Somalia, Western
intelligence officials have said.
The Foreign Office in London linked its Benghazi warning on Thursday to
the French military intervention against Islamic militant rebels in
Mali. Its advisory then said there was a risk of retaliatory attacks
against Western interests in the region in the wake of the French
campaign in Mali and the attack on a remote gas plant in Algeria, described by some of those claiming to be its masterminds as a response to events in Mali.
There was no repeat of the link to the Mali conflict in the new British warning on Somaliland, only a brusque note appended on the Foreign Office Web site saying, “We cannot comment further on the nature of the threats at this time.”
But Africa experts in London said there was little doubt that a common
thread in the two warnings was the high-profile role the British
government had taken in its response to the surging tempo of Islamic
militancy in North Africa.
Britain was the first European country to pledge support for the French
effort in Mali, deploying two C-17 military transport aircraft to carry
French troops, vehicles and equipment to Mali. On Friday, while renewing
its vow not to join in ground combat in Mali, Britain said it had deployed a military spy plane to the region to bolster French intelligence gathering.
But it has been Prime Minister David Cameron’s
strident warnings about the events in Mali and Algeria and their
significance as milestones in the metastasizing threat of Islamic
militancy that has attracted the greatest attention to Britain.
Describing it
as a “global threat,” he has said that it will require a “global
response” that will last “years, even decades, rather than months,” and
he has warned other countries, including the United States, not to
underestimate the gravity of the challenge.
At the height of the gas plant siege, in which six Britons are believed to have died,
Mr. Cameron said that Al Qaeda’s ambition was to establish “Islamic
rule” across the Sahel, the vast region stretching more than 3,000 miles
from the Atlantic in the west to the Horn of Africa in the east, and
that the militants’ ambitions were a threat not only to the nations
involved, but “to us,” meaning Britain, the rest of Europe and the
United States.
It was in that context that the Benghazi warning, and now the Somaliland
one, were issued, Africa experts in London said.
Somaliland has been in international limbo since a secessionist
rebellion seeking independence from Somalia erupted 20 years ago, and
its history throughout that period has been marked by assassinations,
abductions and bombings.
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