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Monday, April 7, 2014

Sea Transportation: Pissed Off Pirates Proliferate






April 7, 2014: The piracy business has changed a lot since 2010, when it had reached levels of activity not seen in over a century. But over the next three years that all changed. By 2013 attacks on ships by Somali pirates had declined 95 percent from the 2010 peak. It’s been over two years since the Somali pirates captured a large commercial ship, and even smaller fishing ships and dhows (small local cargo ships of traditional construction) are harder for them to grab. The rapid collapse of the Somali pirates since 2010 was no accident. It was all a matter of organization, international cooperation and innovation. It all began back in 2009 when 80 seafaring nations formed (with the help of a UN resolution) the Contact Group on Piracy off the Coast of Somalia. The most visible aspect of the Contact Group was the organization of an anti-piracy patrol off the Somali coast. This came to consist of over two dozen warships and several dozen manned and unmanned aircraft, as well as support from space satellites and major

Back in 2010 the Somali pirates got most of the publicity but they only carried out 44 percent of the attacks. What was newsworthy was that the Somalis accounted for 90 percent of the hijackings, and some 80 percent of the piracy was in and around the Indian Ocean. Some 44 percent of all attacks involved the pirates boarding the ships, while in 18 percent the pirates just fired on ships, without getting aboard. There are still pirates out there, but there are more into robbery than kidnapping.
Piracy hit a trough from the late nineteenth century into the later twentieth. That was because the Great Powers had pretty much divided up the whole planet, and policed it. The pirates had no place to hide. Piracy began to revive in a modest way beginning in the 1970s, with the collapse of many post-colonial regimes. Note that what constitutes an act of piracy is often not clearly defined. What most people agree on is that piracy is non-state sanctioned use of force at sea or from the sea. This could include intercepting a speedboat to rob the passengers, but that's usually just thought of as armed robbery. And something like the seizure of the Achille Lauro in 1985 is considered terrorism, rather than piracy. In the past, some marginal states have sanctioned piratical operations, like the Barbary States, but that is rare any more.

The trend, however, was definitely up for two decades, with the big increase coming in the last decade.

  • 1991: About 120 known cases of real or attempted piracy
  • 1994: over 200 cases
  • 2000: 471 cases
  • 2005: 359 cases
  • 2010: over 400 cases

The international effort to suppress Somali piracy has halted and reversed this trend. But while there have been far fewer attacks off Somalia there has been a big jump in attacks in the Straits of Malacca (sevenfold increase since 2009) and off Nigeria (a similar increase). The big difference is that only off Somalia could ships and crews be taken and held for ransom for long periods. Everywhere else the pirates were usually only interested in robbing the crew and stealing anything portable that they could get into their small boats. Off the Nigerian coast pirates sometimes take some ship officers with them to hold for ransom or force the crew to move small tankers to remote locations where most of the cargo (of oil) can be transferred to another ship and sold on the black market.

Pirates usually function on the margins of society, trying to get a cut of the good life in situations where there aren't many options. This is usually in areas where state control is weakest or absent, in failing and "flailed" states. A flailing state is something like Nigeria, Indonesia, or the Philippines, where the government is managing to keep things together but is faced with serious problems with areas that are sometimes out of control. In a failed state like, where there isn't a government at all, pirates can do whatever they want.

The solution to piracy is essentially on land; go into uncontrolled areas and institute governance. This has been the best approach since the Romans eliminated piracy in the Mediterranean over 2,000 years ago. Trying to tackle piracy on the maritime end can reduce the incidence of piracy, but can't eliminate it because the pirates still have a safe base on land. In the modern world the "land" solution often can't be implemented. Who wants to put enough troops into Somalia to eliminate piracy? And flailing states are likely to be very sensitive about their sovereignty if you offer to help them control marginal areas.
Meanwhile there are two areas where pirates still thrive. Piracy in the vital (most of the world's oil exports pass through here) Straits of Malacca was largely an Indonesian phenomenon. It bothered the Singaporeans a lot, the Malaysians a little, and the Indonesians not much. But as Indonesia began stabilizing itself over the past decade (the 2004 Aceh Peace settlement, the institution of a more democratic government, defeating Islamic terrorism), the rate of piracy declined. This decline was facilitated by the combined police effort of Singapore, Malaysia, and Indonesia itself, which didn't come about until a lot of issues among the three states were resolved. Neither Indonesia nor Malaysia were all that upset about smuggling, which bothered Singapore. Indonesia and Singapore still have some problems, as Singapore more or less encourages sand stealing in enormous volumes from Indonesia. Since 2010 there has been an increase in piracy off Indonesia, largely because the Indonesians reduced their anti-piracy patrols without warning or explanation. There are lots of targets, with over 50,000 large ships moving through the Straits of Malacca each year. That’s 120-150 a day. Lots of targets. The shallow and tricky waters in the strait forces the big ships to go slow enough (under 30 kilometers an hour) for speed boats to catch them.

In contrast to the Strait of Malacca situation, the U.S. approach to piracy has been largely a police mission, without trying to deal with the land-side. Again, that would mean occupying Somalia. But there are some regional constraints on piracy. There seems to be little or no piracy in the Red Sea and Bab al-Mandeb. Apparently this was because the smugglers decided the pirates interfered with their business (by bringing in coalition naval forces), and so shut down any pirate operations themselves.



The Gulf of Guinea has become another hot spot for modern (non shipnapping) piracy. Nigeria is badly run and most of the oil revenue is stolen by corrupt officials, leaving people living in the oil producing areas near the coast very angry. More piracy has been one result of all that anger.

Somalia: Kenyan Police Say 'Operation Targeting Somali Immigrants Will Not Stop'



Nariobi - Kenyan police officials vowed to continue the operation against illegal Somali immigrants in Nairobi until they secure the capital of Kenya.
On Saturday the police in Nairobi arrested more than 500 Somalis from the Eastleigh suburb of Nairobi, better known as "Little Mogadishu". Most of the people arrested were those not having the valid Kenyan Identification Cards. The operation continued until Sunday as additional more hundreds were arrested. Those who caught by the police are spending their second night in Kasarani football stadium.
Police Inspector General David Kimaiyo told Anadolu Agency that Police are targeting illegal immigrants and terror suspects in Nairobi.
Meanwhile the plight of the those arrested were in very bad as reports say of police abusing the people. Women with new born babies, pregnant mothers and young children were among those arrested.
"People were not allowed to get food and water. They are not allow allowed to perform the five prayers" Fardawsa Hassan who visited one of the police detention places said.
On Sunday the UNOCHA called the Kenyan gocernment to withdraw its directive against the Somali refugees in Kenya and warned the move will risk the lives of many refugees.
Somali government spokesman said, the Somali citizens with no valid ID cards in Kenya will be taken back to Somalia and that the Federal Government of Somalia will help them return to their home country.

Somalia: Isreal Warns Its Citizens to Travel to Somalia Plus 30 Other Countries



Israel issued a list of 31 countries including Somalia on the warning list of countries that Israelis are advised to stay away from or avoid for vacation or non-essential travel. The list, which is issued twice a year by the Jewish authorities, includes countries that are illegal for Israeli citizens to travel to Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Yemen, Syria and Lebanon Afghanistan Somalia, Sudan and Libya.

Somalis becomes the first time to be included the list and this comes as many Jewish people were planning to take their annual holiday on April 14th. The U.S and other western countries including UK and Australia already issued similar Travel Waring to their citizens telling to stay away from unnecessary travel to Somalia.

Somalia Government Forces backed by the African Union Forces are currently battling against the Al Qarda Linked group of Al Shabab in many parts on the country.

URGENT NEWS: Two foreign UN international staff members shot dead in Somalia

Two foreign UN staff killed at airport in Galkayo, central Somalia, by man wearing police uniform, according to witness
IMAGE


Two foreign United Nations workers have been shot dead at an airport in Galkayo, central Somalia, according to officials.

A United Nations source confirmed the pair were international staff members with the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC).

"Two white men have been shot inside the airport as they got off a plane," local security official Mohamed Mire said. An airport official said the attacker was dressed in a police uniform.

"One of them died inside the airport and the other one was rushed to hospital where he later died of the injuries. Both of them were white men," said Hassan Ahmed, who said he witnessed the incident.

Galkayo is 370 miles (575km) north of the capital Mogadishu and lies on the border with the northern breakaway state of Puntland.

Source: theguardian.com

Somalia: Warlord Qaybdid has officially joined Puntland – What is the offer




Somali Warlord Abdi Qaybdiid who used to claim to be the President of Galmudug state has turned to Puntland, when the Somali Federal Government gave him minimal relationship.

The conflict between Qaybdiid and SFG came when the government has learnt that he gave safe heaven to Al Shabaab Militia with 10 armoured vehicles.

SNTV, state-run TV aired the map where the militia, led by Abdiaziz Abdullahi aka Qooje Dagaari, stays in Hobyo town.  Qaybdiid was the one who allow them to use it as a safe heaven.  Qooje Dagaari hails from Habargedir, Sa’ad, Rer Hilowle, which the same sub-clan Qaybdiid belongs to. 

Qaybdiid has lodged an attack against SFG through the media, saying that their relationship with them has come to an end.  His remarks came shortly after he reached a deal with Puntland President Abdiweli Gaas.  Waagacusub media has learnt that Puntland has offered Vice President, two ministers, and three deputy ministers to Qaybdiid, together with undisclosed amount of money.  All these are subject to fail the efforts by Habargedir clan to establish administration in central Somalia.

Ali Diriye Allore, an elder who is Qaybdiid’s clan-mate with a reputation of closely working with Puntland, said through the media that there’ll be no such Habargedir meeting that can be held in Adado, and proactively rejected its outcome.  SFG directly supports Galmudug Administration led by President Mohamud Elmi. 

Abdi Qaybdiid has a history of confrontation and destruction of administration such as SNA of General Aideed.  Qaybdiid arrived Galkayo shortly after Galmudug signed the roadmap of the Somali politics, and claimed to be the president.  Since then, Galmudug has lost its status and the speedy progress in the areas of the administration.


It is not clear what will happen when Qaybdiid announces his intention to join Puntland, but it may, most likely, result all out war between Habargedir and Majeerteen.  That is why Abdiweli Gaas has selected Qaybdiid who is a known warmonger whom he can use to fight with Hawiye.

Somalia oo suubisatay Lacag Qadaadiic ah: Latest in kitty of a numismatist


the gold-plated coins issued by the Republic of Somalia.                                                            Photo: K.R. Deepak

Somalia has issued a set of six gold-plated coins of mythical creatures. The multi-coloured rectangular coins feature a dragon, a centaur, fairy, mermaid, unicorn, and phoenix.

The coins released by the Republic of Somalia in 2013 are in the denomination of 25 Shillings each. 

The coins are the latest collection in the kitty of noted numismatist D. Satyabuddu.

The 45 mm x 26 mm coins come in individual capsules.


“Some countries are earning precious foreign exchange by issuing coins on various features and putting them up for sale,” says Mr. Satyabuddu. 

Source: thehindu.com

TURKEY BUILDS BRIDGES WITH AID

Operating in more than 100 countries with 37 offices TİKA delivers Turkey's generosity around the world. Turkey advanced its aid activities from basic-needs projects to the preservation of cultural assets and developmental assistance



  • by Elif Merve Yediyıldız
ISTANBUL — Reaching its helping hand around the world, Turkey has increased its Official Development Assistance (ODA) by 30 percent in the last decade. Beginning with emergency aid, Turkey also advanced its aid activities from basic-needs projects to the preservation of cultural assets and developmental assistance. As an important force in the country, the Turkish Cooperation and Coordination Agency (TİKA) conducts leading projects around the world.

Daily Sabah spoke to Dr. Serdar Çam, president of TİKA.

TİKA has been operating since 1992 but came out in force in the last decade, and currently conducts crucial projects in more than 100 countries. Can we say that TİKA is also developing with the new Turkey?
First of all, in order to provide developmental help to foreign countries you need to have the adequate economic power. There is an absolute increase of capacity and gained powers in the last decade due to the political and economic stability.

Sharing its experience and accumulation lies beneath the work of TİKA. We provide a common platform by coordinating and using sources of NGOs, universities, governmental organizations, ministries, companies and local authorities. We also collaborate with the countries we sign protocols with.

We need to understand TİKA as part of a thousand-year-old civilization. In this term, there is a deeper meaning attached to TİKA's projects, that it is not only about implementing.

The most important part is to build bridges between people.

TİKA works in coordination with nongovernmental and governmental organizations and ministries. Can you define the nature of TİKA's working system?
TİKA has provided a platform for other sister countries to share Turkey's opportunities.

Countries such as Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan that no longer have the need are now our partners. For example, recently Azerbaijani and Turkish medical teams conducted joint health projects in Tanzania. Started in a confined region, TİKA currently reaches 110 countries with 37 offices. Of course this helps to develop bilateral relations, for people to know one another and to produce mutual projects in various areas.

Can we also consider this a method to fight terrorism or hostility between the countries?
This can be considered as one of the methods to fight against terrorism or hostility. In the countries where it works, TİKA also serves by creating mutual friendship and to prevent ways to create enemies. Whenever we talk about a 'Turkey model' regarding aid activities, certain qualities occur and the basis of these is sincerity.

Especially after World War II, some developed countries exploited regions under the guise of humanitarian aid.

So does that mean Western countries have a hidden agenda behind their aid work?
I think it would be wrong to use such a political argument. Despite all, some of the United Nations countries and some organizations under the U.N. and OECD organizations, conducted certain aid projects following World War II; thus some further destruction was prevented or reduced. The problems should be detected without making generalizations.

TİKA aims to implement model projects with a sustainable economy without any hidden agenda, via bilateral agreements based on transparency.

What can you tell us about the resources and transparency of TİKA and how can you convince us that there are no hidden agendas?
Tangible projects and measurable outcomes and impacts of on-the-ground activities are important for the credibility of the organization or the donor country. TİKA conducts its projects successfully in terms of maximum productivity and specifically effective usage of resources.

TİKA places special effort on using its resources for the projects itself, without reducing them through administrative or transportation expenses and such. To create and maintain this model is of course a success. In international standards the percentage used for the expenses that includes the personnel salaries and other overhead costs start at 5 percent go up to even 50 percent, whereas in Turkey, the expenses cut from the aid budget are less than 1 percent.

TİKA proceeds with a strict transparency policy. We are inspected in accordance with law no. 5018 pertaining to financial obligations.

The Supreme Board of Public Accounts inspects all our work and projects, not only TİKA's but also other Turkish institutions. Besides, with an internal auditing mechanism TİKA is also inspected by the Parliament. We even invite inspectors from the board to examine our projects on the ground. Transparency, auditability, and maintainability are the most important aspects of aid work and TİKA conscientiously and successfully meets these qualities.

Our cultural heritage, the waqf (charity foundation) experience and the government's stance regarding bureaucratic auditability motivate us in shaping the nature of our system.

So in order to prevent any shady operation by organizations, do you think standardization of rules on an international level is necessary?
Serious work is required in order to develop ethical norms regarding aid work. In fact, Turkey was brought to the fore as a model during international meetings such as OECD meetings.

Last weekend I was in Kenya. There is the Garissa region in the northeastern part of the country populated by people of Somali ethnicity.
As Turkey, we have implemented two important projects there: one is a Mother-Child Health Center, including incubators, operation room and equipment. The other project is in Masalai city where we established a center that provides housing and healthcare services to pregnant women, especially for women who live in distant areas and face the risk of death due to a lack of health facilities. The projects are also targeted to reduce the infant mortality rate.

These projects will help to increase the population, which will be followed by other projects aiming to educate people with vocational training courses, agricultural projects and many others to increase productivity and help people to process their raw natural resources from zero to factory productions.

In Kenya and in the rest of the continent, TİKA's Somalia projects are very popular and stand as solid proof of Turkey and TİKA's sincerity behind the aid work.

On Aug. 14, 2011, Turkey's prime minister arrived in Somalia, a deserted country considered dangerous for terrorist activities, with three planes loaded with people. These aid activities cannot be explained without the word sincerity. Besides many other projects trying to meet the urgent needs of the country, Turkey built a 200-bed capacity hospital in Somalia, including 28 kilometers of road, a university building and a school of nursing. Turkey's aid work in the country, which is based on the values of morality and humanity, has become a reference point for many articles and books on the subject. In other words, Turkey is contributing to the construction of the new Somalia.

In the summer of 2011, a huge aid campaign was organized by the Turkish Red Crescent, TİKA and Turkuvaz Media Group (Daily Sabah's parent company) and I want to thank you especially for this. This campaign triggered other campaigns in Turkey and $300,000 of monetary aid was raised in only one month.

What are your resources and how do you fund your projects?
The State of Turkey funds all our projects after their efficiency and planning is studied under a certain format. TİKA uses the state's budget as well as the Department of Finance and the Prime Ministry Disaster and Emergency Management Presidency's (AFAD) budget.

And occasionally it receives challenge grants via special campaigns as with the Somalia campaign. For individual donations, we sign a protocol with the grant maker, which might be a businessman, municipality or a company to implement a certain project, for example a mosque restoration. We implement projects through our coordination offices. We had only nine offices in 2002, but currently the number of TİKA offices has reached 37. We received requests from all around to open more offices, but we believe in a model based on sustainability.

In order to use our sources and operational capacity effectively, we avoid increasing the number of our offices. Our aim is to keep the offices running as much as possible rather than increasing their numbers. We are working on a model of central coordination that lowers the costs and enables implementing projects without expanding the number of offices.

One of the challenges of the organizations that provide developmental aid is human resources, to find the right people to work with.

A person can be very clever, highly educated and experienced but still might not fit the profile to conduct on-the-ground projects. We need special types of people, who are multi-dimensional, know the technical and monetary sides of the system and the diplomacy; who can work on a construction site as well as in an office. Not only NGOs but also governmental organizations need this type of officer, which is an important inadequacy that needs investment in terms of education.

Preserving cultural heritage a priority

Preserving cultural heritage with tangible and intangible assets is also a part of TİKA's work. Could you give us some details?
Preservation of cultural assets is a sub-category under development that requires economic contribution, expertise and experienced staff.

We are a nation that inherited a historical and cultural heritage scattered around the world. For instance we have Orkhon inscriptions in Mongolia, many other cultural assets in cities such as Bukhara, Samarkand, Merv, Belh (in Khorasan) where Rumi's father Muhammed Bahâeddin Veled's tomb is located. TİKA conducts projects to detect and protect the tangible cultural assets, as well as the collection and classification of data, archeological excavations, and the establishment of museums. TİKA also restores bridges, mosques, madrasahs and executes projects to protect and sustain intangible cultural assets such as values of Ahi guild. Our projects of culture heritage embrace not only Turkish, Turkic or Islamic heritage, but we also plan projects to preserve the assets of other cultures and religions.

One of our highlighted projects is the restoration of King Negash's tomb, located in Mek'ele city of northern Ethiopia.

He was the Christian king of Ethiopia (also known as Ashama ibn Abjar in Arabic) who generously granted refuge to Prophet Mohammed (pbuh). So he is in an important figure in the history of Islam and Christianity. This story also has an important aspect in terms of humanitarian aid. So under the duty of fidelity, Turkey conducts projects of restoration of the tomb and construction of cultural and touristic complex buildings in the country. We try to detect all the cultural assets and protect them through restoration. We detected the monuments of Ottomans in Sawakin Island, Sudan and 14 pieces of Ottoman monuments in Port Zeila in the Gulf of Aden, and the foundation of the house that once belonged to the father of Mustafa Kemal AtatĂĽrk in Kodzadzik, Macedonia. These are just some examples of our works.

Besides these, TİKA also conducts projects to build a bridge of love between the people in the distant geographies and the people of Turkey.

A year and a half ago, Lincoln McCurdy, the president of the Turkish Coalition of America, offered for us to conduct a project for the Native Americans in Oregon, U.S. The idea was also supported by Namık Tan, ambassador of Turkey to the U.S., in order to develop relations.

After the project was approved by our prime minister, we agreed to build a water tank, with a 500,000 gallon capacity. A ceremony was held with the attendance of our ambassador, Namık Tan, 517 tribal chiefs and 10 members of Congress, where we presented our project as a gift from Turkey to the Native Americans of Oregon. The project created a tremendous impact

Somalia: 15 overseas convicted pirates escaped from Puntland Prison


Bossaso main priosn

BOSSASO, Puntland - According local media 15 overseas convicted pirates handed to the authorities in Puntalnd regional administration of Somalia have managed to escaped from Bossaso main prison last Friday.

Puntland Custodian Corps Chief Gen. Ali Nur Omar speaking to local media said "Of the fifteen inmates who escaped from Bossaso prison last Friday, thirteen are still on the run. Security agencies are hunting down the escapees,"


"The men were transferred from a cell after rainwater penetrated through its sheet metal roof, they were placed in another detention but they got a small hole on the wall," he revealed.

Bossaso central prison holds 45 oversees convicted pirates who were handed over to Puntland after being tried in foreign countries. Before two months two of these inmates sustained bullet wounds during the prison break attempt in the port city of Bossaso. 

Adolf Hitler May Have 'Unwittingly Married A Jew' When He Wed Eva Braun






by  Cavan Sieczkowski

Adolf Hitler may have "unwittingly" married a Jewish woman when he wed his mistress, Eva Braun, hours before his death in 1945, at least according to a new documentary.
Braun is the focus of UK's Channel 4 documentary titled "Dead Famous DNA," in which DNA from the relics of famous historical figures is extracted and analyzed to help solve mysteries associated with them. A DNA analysis was conducted on hair samples from a brush monogrammed "E.B." that was found at the end of World War II at Hitler's Alpine residence by an American intelligence officer. The brush allegedly belonged to Braun and DNA analysis purportedly showed it "contained the hair of someone who could have had Jewish ancestry," specifically Ashkenazi Jew ancestry, according to Channel 4.
80% of the world’s Jewish population is Ashkenazi, descended from medieval Jews who lived in central Europe, having first settled in The Rhineland. In the nineteenth century, many Ashkenazi Jews in Germany converted to Catholicism, so Eva Braun is highly unlikely to have known her ancestry and – despite research he instigated into Braun’s race - neither would Hitler.
The son of the American officer who found the brush sold it to a relics dealer after his father's death. That dealer then sold the hair to a hair dealer. Channel 4 purchased eight strands for $2,000. The network attempted to prove the hair was from Braun by getting a DNA sample from two of her surviving female relatives, but the women refused.
Channel 4 came under fire last month after paying thousands of dollars for a lock of Hitler's hair to Holocaust denier David Irving, the UK's Mirror reported. The stunt was called "tawdry" and "disgusting."
Still, this is not the first time Braun's background has come into question.
Hitler met Braun in 1929 at the shop of his personal photographer, Heinrich Hoffmann, according to Eva Braun: Life With Hitler by German historian Heike B. Görtemaker. She was 17 years old at the time; he was 40. "Hitler had her family investigated for Jewish taint," the New York Times noted. She was determined to be of pure Aryan descent.
They married on April 29, 1945, in his Berlin bunker. On April 30, 1945, after hearing about the assassination of Italian dictator Benito Mussolini, Hitler and Braun committed suicide. Their bodies were burned.

Turkey’s Africa policies blend hard, soft power

Turkish navy officers attend a delivery ceremony for the first nationally designed combat ship TCG Heybeliada at the Tuzla Naval shipyard in Istanbul, Sept. 27, 2011.  (photo by REUTERS/Osman Orsal)



by Fehim TaĹźtekin - Contributor, Turkey Pulse

The Turkish government's obsession with becoming a global power is providing a study in contrasts: While Turkey has been using civilian planes to transport weapons to Nigeria, it also is employing navy combat vessels to hand out humanitarian assistance in Africa.


Although confirmation by the Nigerian navy of the admission (in a phone call) by two senior Turkish officials that Turkish Airlines had been transporting weapons to Nigeria got lost in the election pandemonium at home, it was enough to generate misgivings in Africa of what kind of a mission Turkey was pursuing.
But the Justice and Development Party (AKP) government, skillful in public diplomacy, is also launching a US-style campaign that may clear the qualms. The Turkish navy is now on its way to Africa on a humanitarian mission called "Beyond Horizons."
The flotilla of four navy ships will visit 29 ports in 27 countries on a mission of 102 days to deliver humanitarian supplies. The public diplomacy coordinator of the prime minister's office announced that the move will display Turkey’s hard-power elements in a soft-power mission: “The Barbaros [Turkish Naval] Task Force made up of four frigates of the Turkish navy has departed from Kocaeli to fly the Turkish flag at Cape Hope for the first time in 148 years. The task force will visit 27 African countries in 102 days to deliver Turkey’s assistance to countries in need.”
Adm. Bulent Bostanoglu, the commander of Turkish naval forces, said at the March 17 send-off ceremony at Golcuk naval base, "The naval task force will be our first ever to sail around Africa. After 148 years, we will again sail in the waters south of Cape Hope.” According to Bostanoglu, the task force is comprised of four ships, three helicopters, four amphibious assault teams, four underwater mission teams and one underwater commando team with a total of 781 personnel. The Turkish navy will distribute supplies provided by the Ministry of Health and the Cooperation and Coordination Agency (TIKA) of the prime minister's office. The ships are carrying 5,000 parcels of medicines, 400 parcels of food supplies, 180 wheelchairs and 500 boxes of stationery.
The Barbaros Turkish Naval Task Force reached its first stop at the Tunisian Halk el-Wadi port on March 22. The flotilla, after making a short stop at the Canary Islands' Las Palmas port, reached Mauritania’s capital, Nouakchott, on April 1 and Senegal’s capital, Dakar, on April 3.
Naval exercises will be held
While the flotilla will be delivering humanitarian supplies to ports, in open seas it will carry out its real mission of naval exercises. In other words, it will be a test of capacity and capability of hard power fusing soft power. Just as Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu was heard saying in a secret ministry meeting, which was monitored and leaked in a sensational scandal, “You cannot survive in these lands without hard power. But without hard power you can’t have soft power.”
Bostanoglu, in his address to the parting fleet, spoke — in line with AKP government’s foreign policy aspirations — about how “states with a strong economy and a navy form naval task forces adapted to changing security and cooperation environments to support their foreign policies.” According to Bostanoglu, Turkey-Africa relations that gained momentum with the 1998 Opening to Africa Action Plan will acquire new dimensions with the operations of the Barbaros Turkish Naval Task Force.
TIKA in 32 countries
Davutolgu, who went to New York to lobby for Turkey’s UN Security Council membership, addressed the opening meeting of the Alliance of Civilizations Group of Friends and referred to Turkey’s global assistance program in 32 countries. Davutoglu explained that TIKA operates in 32 countries with 35 coordination offices. Turkey’s development assistance from its state budget reached $3.5 billion in 2012. Somalia leads the list of countries receiving Turkey’s humanitarian assistance. It has not gone unnoticed that Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan in 2011 became the first foreign leader in many years to visit Somalia, and that Turkey has organized Somalia conferences and hosted Somali leaders in Turkey.
It was the US-based Gulen movement (Cemaat) that opened up to Africa with its educational institutions long before the state. Erdogan, after declaring war on his former partner Gulen and the Cemaat, is now mobilizing his diplomatic prowess to curtail the Cemaat's activities outside Turkey. The campaign by pro-government newspapers to denigrate the Cemaat’s schools abroad appears as a "tragic U-turn.” This can adversely affect Turkey’s ambition of becoming a soft power that we equate with "humanitarian missions.” The AKP claims that the Cemaat schools and other civilian institutions are in reality a “structure of a parallel state,” and insinuates that it is involved in espionage backed by a global power such as the United States. But these schools were once fervently promoted by the AKP and all other governments as ideal representatives of Turkey. Now the concern is that by creating doubts about these schools' mission, we may also be creating question marks on Turkey’s humanitarian intentions.
Increasing suspicions
Although there is praise for the humanitarian assistance actions, a controversial governmental foreign policy opens the way to a debate on Turkey’s intentions. There are criticisms of Turkey’s efforts to score disproportionate gains from its humanitarian actions that Davutolgu described as “Turkey having become a power of conscience," Turkey’s overlooking the assistance of the West and its challenging of the efforts of the West.
While the AKP government insists that its Africa opening is purely humanitarian, the assistance is accompanied by efforts to spread influence and do business. According to Abdihakim Aynte, the chairman of the Somalia Development Forum, “There are three major elements of Ankara’s principled approach to Somalia: the ethical authority that corresponds to Turkey’s Islamic values, the commercial opportunity that will make Turkey a rising competitor and a neo-strategic vision.” In places where there are efforts to boost Turkey’s influence, diverse reactions might erupt ,as we saw the Somalia’s al-Shabab (al-Qaeda-allied fighters) directly target Turkey. Moreover, applying sectarian discrimination to humanitarian assistance has cast shadows on Turkey’s desire to be portrayed as playing a soft-power role.

Source: al-monitor.com

Sunday, April 6, 2014

Syracuse Church To Have Crosses Removed As Mosque Renovation Plans Go Ahead



SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) — A city board on Thursday gave a Muslim group the go-ahead to remove six crosses from the roof and spires of a century-old former Catholic church so the now-vacant Gothic structure can be used as a mosque.
More than 200 people had signed an online petition calling on the Syracuse Landmark Preservation Board to deny an application by North Side Learning Center, the church's new owner, to remove the crosses and build a six-foot chain-link fence.
Before the vote to allow the church alterations, Chairman Don Radke said the board cannot interfere with a decision that involves religious freedom.
About a dozen people who spoke at the meeting were evenly divided for and against the church conversion, The Post-Standard reported (http://bit.ly/1mDNxfs ).
Petition-signers, who included some local residents and former church parishioners, had argued that the former Holy Trinity Catholic Church was a neighborhood landmark built by German immigrants 100 years ago and removing the crosses would deface the architecture.
The Roman Catholic Diocese of Syracuse closed the church in 2010 and merged the parish with that of St. John the Baptist because of a declining congregation as population shifted from the city to suburbs. The North Side Learning Center, a nonprofit group that provides literacy programs for immigrants, bought the church and its school and rectory for $150,000 in December.
Yusuf Soule, the center's director, has been the public point-person for the mosque effort. He said the crosses must be removed because the Islamic faith prohibits worship of idols and symbols.
A report by the nonprofit Onondaga Citizens League last summer said more than 7,200 refugees have resettled in the Syracuse area over the past 10 years, with the majority from Burma, Bhutan and Somalia.

Death Squads in Kenya’s Shadow War on Shabaab Sympathizers

The United States supports Nairobi’s fight against terrorists, but it’s getting very ugly.

MOMBASA, Kenya—“The state wants to kill me,” the 53-year-old jihadist Abubakar Shariff Ahmed, better known as “Makaburi,” told me in late February. He said he was sure that one day he’d be gunned down by “unknown assailants” on a street in Mombasa. That’s how so many controversial Islamic leaders have died in Kenya in recent months, he said. And then, earlier this week, the prophecy came true.
Young men in the neighborhood told a local reporter that the two shooters were dressed in white kanzus, too, suggesting they were Muslims, and perhaps known to Makaburi and the others. But few in Kenya credit that possibility. The record of murders in recent months provides ample indication that a dirty war is being waged. Its evident purpose is to exterminate and intimidate people believed to be associated with the Al Shabaab movement in neighboring Somalia. For several reasons, those carrying it out may believe they have at least the tacit support of the United States, and, as often happens with dirty wars and death squad operations, this murderous campaign appears be galvanizing the opposition it aims to destroy.On Tuesday, “unknown assailants” gunned down Makaburi as he was leaving a courthouse outside Mombasa. Makaburi was waiting by the side of the road along with four other preachers when a vehicle pulled up and sprayed them with bullets. Witnesses reportedly saw Makaburi’s body, swaddled in a white kanzu, or robe, lying partly in a ditch.  His colleague Sheikh Bohero also was killed.
Makaburi (the nickname means grave digger in Swahili) preached at the Musa mosque in Mombasa, which is considered an incubator of radicalism, and Makaburi recruited fighters there for Al Shabaab, which has developed close ties with Al Qaeda. On Sunday, February 2, security forces raided the mosque for hosting what the police described as a “jihad convention.” They stormed the building, firing tear gas and live rounds in a raid that resulted in 129 arrests and eight deaths, including that of a policeman. Before that, two other clerics associated with the place had died in a hail of bullets.
When Makaburi and I talked in February, he claimed that the others had been “assassinated” in “retaliation” for last year’s attack on Nairobi’s Westgate shopping mall, in which members of Al Shabaab claimed responsibility for killing at least 67 civilians and injuring hundreds. But the killings started before that, as one radical imam after another has been murdered or disappeared. Religious leaders say Kenyan security forces are targeting them unfairly for persecution if not indeed for summary execution, but the police argue they have clear intelligence linking many of the local preachers to Somali terrorists.
On the day we met, Makaburi was as welcoming and relaxed as he could be.  Our three-hour interview took place in his cockpit-sized apartment in Mombasa’s run-down Majengo district, which has been the epicenter of recent violence. Around him he’d arrayed a desktop computer, a wall-mounted plasma TV with images of Muslims he said the police had tortured, miniature copies of the Qur’an, and a few creature comforts: an industrial-size bag of mini chocolate bars, and tubs of Blue Band margarine.Makaburi told me when I saw him that he thought the only reason he was still alive was that Kenya feared domestic unrest. Some of the “unknown assailant” murders have led to bloody rioting. But whoever killed him seems to have thought the risk worth taking, and days after the shooting the reaction is still muted.
Behind Makaburi’s head was pinned a black flag with the profession of faith, the shahada, written on it: “There is no God but God and Mohammed is his messenger” and, beneath it, a single primitively drawn sword.
“Don’t worry, I am not going to suck your blood,” Makaburi assured me.  I’d been struggling to cover my hair with a scarf to use as a hijab. He asked if it were bothering me. “Don’t wear it if you don’t want,” he said. “Pretending to be something you’re not is disrespecting yourself. Just be yourself.”
The genial imam made an interesting contrast with the image of him painted by the United States, the United Nations and Kenyan authorities.
A 2012 U.S. Treasury report blocking the assets of several people suspected of supporting Al Shabaab closely mirrors language also adopted by the United Nations Security Council (PDF), and it reads like a ringing indictment of Makaburi:
“He provides material support to extremist groups in Kenya and elsewhere in East Africa.  Through his frequent trips to al-Shabaab strongholds in Somalia, including Kismaayo, he has been able to maintain strong ties with senior al-Shabaab members,” the U.S. report said. Makaburi “also engaged in the mobilization and management of funding for al-Shabaab,” he “has preached at mosques in Mombasa that young men should travel to Somalia, commit extremist acts, fight for al-Qa’ida, and kill U.S. citizens.” He was “a leader of a Kenya-based youth organization in Mombasa with ties to al-Shabaab” and “acted as recruiter and facilitator for al-Shabaab in the Majengo area of Mombasa.”
Some of the accusations, Makaburi told me, “are bullshit—like ‘committing extremist acts’ and ‘financing terror.’” He pulled out a desk drawer and removed a few filthy currency notes. “This is all I have—640 Kenya shillings,” which would be less than $10. “I don’t have enough to fund a reporter, let alone a terrorist organization.” But then he went on. Some of the accusations “are correct,” he said. He made no apology for recruiting young men to wage jihad in Somalia.
"Radicalizing the youths is the only direction to go when the Kenyan government won’t allow the constitution to protect them and when police are killing sheikhs and imams extrajudicially,” said Makaburi. “Are we supposed to take this lying down?”
The accusation that Makaburi encouraged young men to kill Americans touched a nerve—and did not elicit a denial. “Let me ask you,” he said, “Americans are invading other people’s lands, taking them prisoners, renditioning  them and torturing them. Raping and killing innocent women and children is not allowed in warfare.” The argument is boilerplate Al Qaeda, but many people in developing countries, Muslims and non-Muslims alike, find it persuasive.
When the post-9/11 Global War on Terror waged by the Bush administration was at its height, Kenya became an important player in American eyes. Since 2003 Kenya has received extensive aid from the State Department’s anti-terrorism assistance fund and a program now known as the Partnership for Regional East Africa Counterterrorism, or PREACT. Among its objectives, according to the State Department, “It uses law enforcement, military, and development resources to achieve its strategic objectives, including reducing the operational capacity of terrorist networks.”
Things intensified when Kenya invaded Somalia in 2011 in an operation calledLinda Nchi (Swahili for “Protect the Country”), ostensibly in reaction to kidnappings of tourists in northern Kenya. It was considered inevitable that Al Shabaab would try to strike back on Kenyan territory.
Al Shabaab’s ideological and military leaders regrouped and began recruiting Kenyans to fight in Somalia and build support in Kenya.  This was where Makaburi’s work became important.
The July 2012 U.N. report on Shabaab-related activity identified a homegrown Kenyan group called al-Hijra under the leadership of the charismatic Sheikh Aboud Rogo and Makaburi. After those published reports a growing number of clerics and imams were killed or—in human rights parlance—“forcefully disappeared.”
In May 2012 blind cleric Mohammed Kassim and fellow hardline cleric Samir Khan were traveling to Manjengo when men in a white Toyota van stopped them by the side of the road. The pair had been charged with possession of illegal firearms and recruitment of youths to Al Shabaab, but not convicted, just the kind of situation that tends to precede extrajudicial killings. Khan’s mutilated body was found in Voi, some 150 miles from Mombasa. Kassim’s body has not been found, and if he is alive his whereabouts are unkown.
On August 27, 2012, one month after the U.N. report was published, “unidentified assailants” gunned down Rogo as he drove his wife home from a Mombasa hospital. Weeks before his assassination the sheikh had contacted human rights groups saying that he feared for his life, but they were unable to help him. Rogo’s death sparked days of rioting in Mombasa. Young men took to the streets, hurled grenades and burned churches.
“It’s difficult to say who killed Rogo,” says Jonathan Horowitz, the legal representative with Open Source Foundation’s National Security and Counterterrorism Justice unit, funded by philanthropist George Soros. “But when you look at circumstantial evidence, the pattern of events, the modus operandi, and the audacity with which the killing took place, it all points to the hand of the state.”
After Rogo died, Makaburi was his natural successor.  “He was more than a brother to me,” Makaburi told me, and Makaburi was outraged at what he regarded as a US-government-funded extermination project:
“I am the one who is accused of radicalizing when it’s the police who are radicalizing the Muslim youth by killing us.”
Meanwhile, Al Shabaab and its allies have not remained passive. The Westgate Mall attack commanded global attention day after day last September, but it was part of a much wider pattern of violence. According to the report “Kenya and the Global War on Terror” issued by the London School of Economics, “Shabaab and its sympathizers have conducted more than 50 separate grenade attacks in Kenya, believed to be in retaliation for Operation Linda Nchi and more widely the foreign policy of Kenya.”
Most of the extremist attacks have occurred in northeastern Kenya near the Somali border. But the violence made headlines again in November last year when two grenade attacks occurred in Diani, a tourist resort town south of Mombasa. On December 12 police said a grenade was hurled at a minivan carrying two British tourists. The grenade never exploded and the tourists were unharmed.
On January 2 a grenade exploded in a sports bar in the same tourist town and authorities labeled it a “terrorist attack.” There were no fatalities in either incident but they were widely reported in the international media.
The tit-for-tat violence grew increasingly brutal. On December 3, the headless body of Faiz Rufai, a former Shabaab member and madrassa teacher believed to have turned informant, was discovered washed ashore on a remote beach up the coast. Al Shabaab “sympathizers” allegedly carried out the beheading and posted a camera-phone video of the decapitation on Facebook.
Word went out in jihadist circles that Rufai’s handler in the security services was Athmed Bakshwein, a 61-year old police reservist, who was also said to have played an important role in other terrorist cases. On January 28, Bakshwein was gunned down in broad daylight as he was parking his car in front of a hardware store in his hometown of Malindi.
Leaflets circulated in Mombasa featured the image of Bakshwein’s bullet-riddled corpse and called him a traitor to Islam. “Supporters of jihad have begun killing informers,” proclaimed the flyer. “It is a sign that jihad is not far. … May Allah clean the mosque of informer imams and traitors and finish them one by one.”
The Kenyan police assault on the “jihadist convention” at the Musa mosque came just days later.
When I met with Makaburi to discuss all this, he was defiant. “I challenge Obama to give me my day in court anywhere in the USA to prove that I am financing Al Shabab. I am willing to travel today,” Makaburi told me.
Makaburi never got his day in a US court. But at the time of his death Makaburi had several cases against the police pending in Kenya. Last week, days before he was gunned down, the high court awarded him $7,718 in damages for the violation of his rights when police raided his house in 2011.
The violence continues to mount. Last month armed men attacked a church in Likoni, leaving eight people dead, including a young boy. Since then Kenya has asked the United States for more funding to combat terror. U.S. Ambassador Robert F. Godec said that recent sporadic violence in Mombasa was a sign that terrorism in Kenya was a real threat and vowed to stand by Kenya’s side. In a statement issued this week Godec said the United States “deplores the recent violence on the Kenyan coast,” including the murder of Makaburi, and called for “calm and restraint.” He also called for the Kenyan government to “undertake full investigations” of the “murders” of the Muslim clerics and the “terrorist attack” on the church. Those responsible, he said, should be held accountable “through the Kenyan justice system.”
In response to questions from The Daily Beast about the impact U.S. aid has on Kenyan counter-terror operations, Godec said “all training includes modules devoted to respect for human rights and the rule of law.”
But Horowitz’s summation of the situation is probably more realistic. “Groups that subscribe to violent extremism often justify their actions by citing the government’s human rights abuses, including extrajudicial executions,” he said after Makaburi was gunned down. “But the Kenya government has a lot to answer for… Ending these murders and ending violent extremism in Kenya are inseparable. The Kenyan government has failed to grasp this.”
When I met with Makaburi in his little apartment, he seemed completely resigned to his fate. He had been born in Mombasa and brought up there. His father, who worked in a box factory, was fixing a fan one day at home and got electrocuted. “He died when I was a child still crawling,” said Makaburi. Death happens. Life has strange twists. As he and his brothers grew up they took different paths. In fact, one of his brothers works for the Kenyan intelligence service, he told me. “Sheik Rogo used to say my mother was fair: she gave one son to Obama and the other to Osama.”
Then Makaburi said, simply, “I am waiting to be killed.” And so he was.
Source: thedailybeast.com