Sheikh Ahmed Madobe, the self-declared 'President' of Jubaland, enjoys tacit Kenyan support. PHOTO | FILE |
After decades of war,
Somalia is taking small steps toward recovery, but breakaway regions, rival
clans and the competing interests of neighbouring nations are threatening its
fragile progress, analysts warn.
In the past two years,
African Union troops have wrested town after town from Al-Qaeda-linked
Al-Shabaab insurgents, hauling down their black Islamist banners and raising
Somalia’s flag.
But asserting the
authority of the central government — which until recently controlled just a
few blocks of the capital Mogadishu — is a far harder task.
“In Somalia today there is
only one federal government that is wholly owned by the Somali people, widely
represented by all Somalis, all regions,” Somali President Hassan Sheikh
Mohamud told reporters this week.
But others disagree,
including powerful militia forces backed by foreign armies.
The worst flashpoint is
the far southern region dubbed 'Jubaland' bordering Kenya and Ethiopia.
Both nations have troops
there after invading in late 2011, while this month several rival warlords
declared themselves “president”, sparking anger in Mogadishu.
But the effective
self-appointment of former Islamist chief Ahmed Madobe, one of the most
powerful of the “presidents” due to Kenyan backing, risks opening a rift
between Nairobi and Mogadishu.
“The effort to create a
Jubaland state within Somalia will test the limits of federalism in that
country, and threatens to touch off clan warfare not only within Somalia but
also in its neighbours,” the International Crisis Group warned in a recent
report.
Jubaland, which includes
the key port city of Kismayu, has a lucrative charcoal industry, fertile
farmland as well as potential off-shore oil and gas deposits.
Ogadeni clan
Addis Ababa, long term
experts in playing off powerful factions, is wary of Madobe, who hails from the
same Ogadeni clan as rebels fighting inside Ethiopia.
However, Mogadishu’s
government — selected last year by clan elders in a UN-backed process and the
first to be recognised internationally in more than two decades — is full of
confidence.
“Any one group within
Somalia that just gets together sits there and says, we are 'XYZ’, has no
legitimacy and has no recognition at local level and at international level,”
said Mohamud.
But international
recognition counts for little within Somalia, and central rule is
controversial.
The last to claim control
was Siad Barre, toppled in 1991 after a rule marked by repression of opposition
and a bloody civil war against Somaliland.
Years of anarchy meant
Somalis reverted to age-old systems of autonomy and traditional semi-nomadic
camel herding.
Somalia split into regions,
from fiercely independent Somaliland along the Gulf of Aden, to Puntland in the
northeast, which recognises a federal government but says that has no role in
its internal affairs.
Analysts warn of tough
political times ahead.
While AU troops backing Mogadishu
have enjoyed territorial success, Roland Marchal, an analyst with French
research institute CNRS, notes the fighting force lacks a “political strategy
to go with the military strategy”.
Kenya’s army, which
invaded in 2011 alongside Madobe’s allied troops, faces a particularly sticky
predicament.
In 2012, its cash-strapped
military joined the AU force — funded by the UN and European Union — leaving
its soldiers backing a warlord opposing the central government it is mandated
to support.
Mogadishu lawmakers have
submitted a motion demanding Kenya leave Somalia, while Mohamud said Kenyan
troops “misbehaved” when a top-level government delegation went to Kismayu and
“did not treat the committee well”.
Ambitions by central
government have highlighted internal divisions within regions.
Security buffer
Tensions in Jubaland have
raised concern in Puntland, which swiftly welcomed Madobe’s election by calling
on other regions “to establish states in a similar consultative and open
process”.
Puntland has been keen to
stake out power boundaries, with its oil agency chief Issa Farah warning
Mogadishu it alone is the “competent authority” to manage the region’s oil
exploration.
Mogadishu’s inability to
“exercise its authority over the Kismayu process is undermining its influence
in the remaining regions of Somalia and the emerging arrangements towards
federalism,” warned Andrews Atta-Asamoah of the Pretoria-based Institute of
Security Studies (ISS) in a recent paper.
At present, the only thing
all appear to agree on is that the rivalry benefits Al-Shabaab, still in
control of swathes of countryside.
East African heads of
state last week urged Somalia hold a “reconciliation conference”, warning
infighting could “threaten peace and stability”.
Yet many also eye the
economic, strategic and political profits of the region.
Kenya wants a security
buffer zone to protect its valuable tourism industry, a proposed major port in
Lamu and hopes of offshore oil and gas finds.
It also hopes stability
would let it send back the half a million Somali refugees it hosts.
Landlocked Ethiopia has
long played a powerful role in Somalia, with Kismayu offering another possible
route to the sea.
Yet Mogadishu remains
upbeat, mindful its position today was unthinkable a few years ago.
“Somalia is fragmented,
it’s divided into regions, clans, groups,” Mohamud said. “The current Somali
government is busy with rebuilding and organising to have one Somalia.”
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