Henry Srebrnik, [Charlottetown, PEI] Guardian
In the aftermath of the terrorist attack on the Westgate
Mall in Nairobi, Kenya Sept. 21-24, which resulted in at least 67 deaths, many
people have wondered who the perpetrators, known as al-Shabaab, are, and why
they carried out such a murderous assault.
While the Somali group has been active for less than a
decade, the antagonistic relationship between Somalis and Kenyans dates back to
the pre-1960s colonial days.
In the colonial era, the territories inhabited by the Somali
people were divided between Britain, France, Italy, and Ethiopia. But only the
old British and Italian Somaliland colonies were united as one nation, in 1960.
Upon independence, therefore, the new Somalia laid claims to
all of the remaining areas inhabited by Somalis, based on the irredentist idea
that all Somalis should be united in one country. In 1977, Somalia fought a war
with Ethiopia to try to gain the Ogaden, an area populated by Somalis, but
lost.
As for Kenya, which itself gained its independence from
Britain, in 1964, its Northern Frontier District, now the North Eastern
Province, was handed over to Kenyan nationalists at the end of British colonial
rule despite the fact that it is inhabited almost entirely by Somalis.
The Somalis in the region fought a war against Kenyan troops
between 1963 and 1967 to join their kin in the Somali Republic to the north.
Although the war ended into a cease-fire, the Somalis there still identify and
maintain close ties with their kin in Somalia, and see themselves as one
people. They number more than two million people, out of Kenya’s total
population of 44 million.
The two countries continued to have a troubled relationship.
Kenyan forces were engaged in two massacres of ethnic Somalis in the province
in 1980 and 1984.
But Somalia itself has been without an effective government
since 1991, when the last dictator, Mohamed Siad Barre, fled the country. It
has been governed, or more accurately misgoverned, by a collection of
clan-based “warlords,” who have looted and murdered their way through the
country ever since.
As a reaction to this Hobbesian lawlessness, a system of
Islamic courts became the main governmental body in much of the country. United
into the Islamic Courts Union by 2006, they were eliminated by other Somalis,
backed by the Ethiopian military, in a brutal war. But a militant offshoot morphed
into the al-Qaeda affiliated Harakat
al-Shabaab al-Mujahideen (Mujahideen Youth Movement), or al-Shabaab.
Ethiopia and Kenya, neither of them Muslim-majority states, have
periodically crossed into Somalia ever since then to battle the terrorists. In
2011 their troops entered Somalia in a coordinated attack, known as Operation
Linda Nchi, against the al-Shabaab insurgents in southern Somalia.
As well, in November of last year, Kenyan forces launched a
military attack on the Garissa district of their own North Eastern Province,
inciting violence, raping women and shooting at students; a mass exodus of
Somali residents followed.
In return, al-Shabaab has carried out attacks on Ethiopian
and Kenyan troops in Somalia, but also against those countries on their owl
soil as well. We learned the full extent of their retaliation when they wreaked
havoc in Nairobi.
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