By:
Ahmed Ali Ibrahim Sabeyse
Somalilandsun
- Throughout the history of mankind the teachings of the Holy Prophets
emphasized unequivocally the sanctity of the human life. From that back drop, a
critical evaluation of Mr. Shirdon's immunity request regarding the civil case
against Mohamed Ali Samatar is in order. Without Prejudice to the parties in
the Civil Action No. 04-1360. This case is based on a solid legal ground in
conformity with the following International Human Rights Conventions:
- The Nuremberg Military Tribunal of 1945
- Convention on the Non-applicability of Statute of Limitations on War Crimes
- The Universal Declaration of Human Rights
- Convention on Civil and Political Rights
- Optional Protocol to the Convention on Civil and Political Rights
- Convention on Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights
- Convention against on Torture
- Convention against Genocide
- Geneva Conventions and subsequent Protocols
- Convention on the Rights of the Child
- Convention on the Elimination of Discrimination
- The Charter of the United Nations
- African Charter on Peoples' and Human Rights
On
the record, General Mohamed Ali Samatar had admitted his role in the atrocities
of Somalia's military government against the civilian population of Somaliland.
His orders resulted in the death of over 70,000 non-combatants and by virtue of
his position of command and control, he is culpable for any resultant damages
under international law.
Granting
diplomatic immunity to a mass murderer is a travesty of justice. At his Command
post at Hargeisa Airport, General Samatar gave the final instructions on the
aerial and artillery bombardment of the city five miles north of the Airport.
For three months the Somali air force relentlessly target practiced on this
densely populated city and the civilian casualties were very high.
In
its 1987 yearbook Amnesty International had documented the scorched earth
tactics of Siyad Barre's regime. Even the life stock did not escape the heavy
machine guns of the Somali air force. To this day tens of thousands of
Somalilanders are suffering the lingering mental and psychological trauma of
the war. While the International Court of Justice has set up special Tribunals
for the war criminals of Rwanda and the former Yugoslav Republic, the mass
murderers of Somalia are still free waiting to be brought before justice.
Having
said that, and in response to the letter of Somalia's prime minister, here is
the first paragraph of the said letter:
"Dear
Secretary of State Kerry:
The
Federal Republic of Somalia presents its compliments to the Department of
State. On behalf of the Government of the Federal Republic of Somalia, I, Abdi
Farah Shirdon, Prime Minister of Somalia, have the distinct honor and high
privilege, by this letter, of requesting urgently, pursuant to the powers
vested in me by the Federal Republic of Somalia Provisional Constitution,
adopted 1 August 2012, that you use your good offices to obtain immunity for
Mohamed ali Samater, the former Prime Minister of Somalia, from 1987-1990, and
the Defense Minister and First Vice President of Somalia, from 1982-1986, in
respect of certain civil litigation brought against him before the United
States District for the Eastern District of Virginia, styled as Bashe Abdi
Yousuf, et alii, versus Mohamed Ali Samatar, Civil Action No. 04-1360("the
litigation").
From
the wording of this paragraph, we can surmise that the original was drafted in
Somali and subsequently a literal translation of the text was performed.
Therefore, the apparent lack coherence and unity of the central idea.This sort of
cumbersome wording is counter productive because the text has lost its original
form, fit and function in the translation. Regardless of the subject matter,
unity, coherence, and the logical sequence of the ideas are paramount to
captivate the intended recipient.
Now,
assuming that the following segment is the central idea of this paragraph,
"
..I, Abdi Farah Shirdon, Prime Minister of Somalia, have the distinct honor and
high privilege, by this letter, of requesting urgently, pursuant to the powers
vested in me by the Federal Republic of Somalia Provisional Constitution,
adopted 1 August 2012, that you use your good offices to obtain immunity for
Mohamed Ali Samater,..."
the
emphasis is on
"..that
you use your good offices to obtain immunity for Mohamed Ali Samater,..".
As it
is, this sort of language is very undiplomatic and is indicative of the Somali
prime minister's complete ignorance of international relations. For one thing,
influence peddling is a taboo subject in diplomacy.
The
honourable Prime Minister of Somalia or the Federal Republic of Somalia, Mr.
Abdi Farah Shirdon, as a novice politician needs a lesson or two on the working
dynamics of the United States Government and its constitution. Perhaps, the
Somali Prime Minister needs to understand that the three branches of the
government of the United States of America-The Executive, the Judiciary, and
the Legislature operate independently under constitutionally mandated
jurisdictional spheres and as such, this is were the concept of checks and
balances and transparency comes into play.
Furthermore,
any case brought before the courts of the United States takes its course
through judicial process without intervention from the other two branches of
government. Interceding on behalf of an indictable war criminal is an affront
to the norms of civility.
On an
intellectual level, the Somali prime minister has a skewed sense of priority
and his letter to the United States Secretary of State is nothing but an
embodiment of the sublime evil incarnated in a human form.
On
another level, the paragraph consists of two sentences. Count the punctuation
marks to make any rational sense out of what the Somali Prime minister has to
say.There are three full stops/periods, one quotation mark, and eighteen
commas! The comma is unfairly overused at the expense of the other thirteen
punctuation marks.
To
say the least, the eighteen commas in the sentence destroyed the meaning of the
paragraph and the American Secretary of State will require the service of an
English language professor to decipher the Somali prime minister's letter.
The
prime minister's letter is nine paragraphs long and the response to the
remaining eight paragraphs will follow in installments.
God
bless the nation of Somaliland, and the uncountable victims of General Samantar's Somali National Armies.
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