Introduction The Myth of Somalia
Introduction The Myth of Somalia
Brian J. Hesse
To cite this article: Brian J. Hesse (2010) Introduction: The myth of ‘Somalia’, Journal of
Contemporary African Studies, 28:3, 247-259
‘Somalia’ in abstract
‘Somalia’, a number-seven-shaped country on the north-eastern horn of the African
continent, has long been a contested concept, even amongst Somalis. For example, at
independence in 1960 when British Somaliland and Italian Somaliland united to
form The Republic of Somalia, some Somalis agitated for a much larger version of a
country. Their country, a ‘Greater Somalia’, would have included Somali brethren in
what is today Djibouti, eastern Ethiopia and northern Kenya. Indeed, it was in part
with an eye to expand the contours of ‘Somalia’ that the Mogadishu-based dictator
General Mohamed Siyaad Barre invaded the Ethiopian Ogaden in 1977/78. After
suffering some 25,000 casualties in less than a year and losing the war, an array of
opposition forces rose up, all intent on overthrowing the Barre regime. It ultimately
fell after many bloody years, in January 1991. Thus began a definitive fragmentation
of ‘Somalia’.
In the wake of the Barre regime’s collapse some three million Somalis (out of
an estimated population of between 6.8 to eight million in ‘Somalia’) declared
unilateral independence in May 1991; they continue to build their independent
Republic of Somaliland in the northwest. In the northeast some 1.5 million Somalis
declared their own autonomous state of Puntland in 1998; in the intervening years
they have elected four presidents, the most recent having assumed office in January
2009. In the middle and south of Somalia various ‘autonomous states’ have been
declared Galmudug State in 2006, for example albeit they have tended to look
and function like much of the rest of the anarchic south, known for its shifting, often
violent, patchwork of clan-based fiefdoms. And, of late, variations of yet another
type of Somali nationalist have risen up: one wishing to forge a ‘historic Somaliland’
in the name of Islam. Presumably these Islamists’ geographic vision bears little
resemblance to the distinctly shaped ‘Somalia’ of most maps.
The fact that the ‘Somalia’ of most maps endures owes much to the international
community. From the United Nations down through its member states, including
those in the African Union and the Arab League to the besieged Transitional Federal
*Email: BHESSE@nwmissouri.edu
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248 B.J. Hesse
Government of Somalia in Mogadishu, the official line is that the territorial integrity
of ‘Somalia’ is inviolable and indivisible. Granted, this tenet often tends to be
self-serving: many states were products of less than organic processes themselves with
borders drawn by, say, colonial powers; the governments of such states fear that a
fractured ‘Somalia’ might encourage separatist movements within their own
countries. Regardless, the prevailing view is this: that a majority of Somalis can be
and will be united in a viable state one day. Such a view belies the fact that in the
modern era Somalis have nearly always lived with a dizzying array of flags, but rarely
united under one of their own.
An allegorical flag
The official, internationally recognised Somali flag consists of a five-pointed, white
star on a field of light blue. Each of the star’s points represents one of five parts of the
Horn of Africa where ethnic Somalis live. But over the Ogaden, it is Ethiopia’s flag
which flies. In the Northern Frontier District, it is Kenya’s. In former British
Somaliland, the flag of The Republic of Somaliland now predominates. In Djibouti,
it is that sovereign country’s standard. And in a fifth part of the Horn, the part that
used to be Italian Somaliland (that is, the north-eastern parts of Somalia to southern
Somalia), even here the Somali national ensign is rarely seen, replaced in some
instances by the banner of Islam.
As for the field of light blue on the Somali national flag, it is a similar shade to
the blue on the United Nations’ flag. When the Somali national flag was created in
1954 the blue might have signified hope for an end to the UN’s trusteeship era, then
being carried out by the United Kingdom and Italy. Later, the field of blue might
have come to signify the UN’s unwillingness to stop Ethiopian military incursions
into, and outright occupations of, Somalia (the latest Ethiopian occupation lasted
from 2006 to January 2009, and placed between 8000 and 15,000 forces on Somali
soil). Or the field of blue might signify the various UN-blessed military interventions
in Somalia since 1992: from America’s ‘Operation Restore Hope’, which reached a
peak of 30,000 US and other troops; through UNOSOM II of ‘Blackhawk Down’
fame, with a multi-national force of 28,000 personnel and 3000 civilians; to the
African Union’s deployment from January 2009 of up to 8000 peacekeepers, of which
just over 5000 were on the ground as of February 2010.
Simultaneously, countless non-governmental organisations (NGOs) have shown
their colours in Somalia, from the ACF (Action Contre la Faim) to the Red Cross and
Red Crescent Societies. Today there are no less than 50 NGOs in the field (United
Nations Relief Web 2010; Somalia NGO Consortium 2009), their banners signifying
activity and projects the Transitional Federal Government of Somalia cannot do
alone, or is incapable of doing at all.
Finally, there are the flags associated with Somali refugees and the Somali
diaspora. In Africa large Somali populations are found in Ethiopia, Kenya and
Djibouti. In the Middle East significant Somali communities are found in Yemen
and the United Arab Emirates, and smaller ones in Saudi Arabia, other Gulf States
and Egypt. In Europe, the United Kingdom hosts the largest number of Somalis,
while the Netherlands, Norway, Denmark, Sweden and Finland, too, have sizable
communities. And in North America one can find substantial Somali communities in
the United States and Canada, especially around Minneapolis and Toronto. In total
Journal of Contemporary African Studies 249
more than one million Somalis live outside Somalia, or stated another way, about
14% of all Somalis live abroad (UNDP 2009). From abroad the Somali diaspora is
estimated to send home between US$750 million and US$1 billion annually (Lewis
2008, 134; Maimbo 2006, 20). The remittances are meant not to support ‘Somalia’
per se, but family- and clan-members. And it is families and clans to which Somalis
typically show their highest degree of loyalty.
A clan-driven narrative
In Somali genealogy most Somalis are born into one of six ‘big tent’ clans. Four of
these clans the Darod, Dir, Hawiye and Isaaq, collectively known as ‘Samaale’
clans1 share the closest linguistic and cultural ties. These historically nomadic clans
together constitute somewhere around 75% of all ethnic Somalis. Two more clans
the Digil and Rahanweyn of southern Somalia, sometimes called Digil-Mirifle
together comprise about 20% of all ethnic Somalis. They speak af-maymay, distinct
from the af-maxaa of Samaale clans, and have historically practised a more
sedentary lifestyle of farming and/or pastoralism. Additionally, and in contrast to
the borderline xenophobia of many Samaale clans, Digil and Rahanweyn clans have
had a custom of assimilating clansmen, from non-ethnic Somalis to former slaves
and their descendants. Indeed, in the Rahanweyn’s language their clan’s name means
‘large crowd’. A divide between Samaale clans and the Rahanweyn and Digil clans
is pointedly evident when Samaale clan members use the derogatory word sab
(translation: ‘ignoble’) when referring to some of their Rahanweyn and Digil Somali
brethren.
Somalis further classify themselves into subclans, or even sub-subclans and
beyond. For example, in the Isaaq clan, which falls under the umbrella ‘Samaale’
clan structure, there are no less than three (some scholars say as many as eight)
subclans: the Habar Awal, Habar Jaalo, and the Harhajis. The Habar Awal are then
divided into at least two sub-subclans: the Sa’ad Muse and the Lise Muse . . . and so
on. Classification can even extend right down to the household level: if a man has
more than one wife, for example, some in the household might stress the clans,
subclans or sub-subclans associated with one maternal line over another. What is
more, not all Somalis agree to which lineage lines other Somalis belong. Somali
genealogy presents individuals with a seemingly infinite number of ways to affiliate
with, or disassociate from, fellow Somalis which may be the point.
Whether one is looking at those in a day-to-day nomadic existence in a semi-
desert, day-to-day existence in an urban area of a failed state, or day-to-day existence
as newly-arrived émigrés in a foreign land, Somalis need to have durable yet
malleable ways to negotiate limited opportunities and limited resources. The Somali
lineage system accomplishes this.
Whereas outsiders usually see an impractically complex, shifting system of
genealogy, many Somalis see a practically complex, shifting one. Has a water hole
or grazing area become too small for the number of clansmen using it? A subclan or
sub-subclan can break away and assert control over it. Has another clan come
to monopolise an area of commerce, to the detriment of all others? A number of
subclans can pool their resources to start their own rival enterprise. Have members
of a particular household established themselves in London or Minneapolis? A new
arrival of the same lineage can tap these distant relatives for advice and support.
250 B.J. Hesse
president and prime minister vied openly to serve their Darod- and Hawiye-clan
bases, respectively. When the parliament finally did convene again in February 2006
it was at last on Somali soil, but from a converted grain warehouse in the western
city of Baidoa. During this time it was not the TFG which expanded its writ in
Somalia; rather it was the Union of Islamic Courts (UIC). In the first half of 2006
the UIC, a broad umbrella group of moderate to fundamentalist Islamists and
Somali nationalists, racked up military victories against ‘The Alliance for the
Restoration of Peace and Counter-Terrorism’ in reality little more than a coalition
of US-backed clan militias. A semblance of peace and stability followed. For the first
time in 16 years Mogadishu’s seaport and international airport reopened, large
swathes of central and southern Somalia fell under a unified administration,
commerce surged, and members of the Somali diaspora returned including
many members of the TFG, to Baidoa.
Khartoum-based talks followed as regional actors tried to bring the TFG and
UIC together to forge a unity government. Neither side trusted the other. The UIC
was suspicious of the corrupt ‘per diem culture’ of the TFG. The TFG’s members
suspected they would lose power and patronage in any unity government. At a
deadlock, the UIC tried to impose a victor’s peace. In pushing westward, towards
Baidoa, the UIC came in increasing contact with Ethiopian forces officially in
Somalia as ‘trainers’ for a nascent TFG national military. As clashes escalated some
of the more radical leaders within the UIC began to call for a ‘holy war against
Christian Ethiopia’. Ethiopian leaders in turn articulated their own radical claims,
saying the UIC had extensive links with al-Qaeda and that there was a real danger of
a Taliban-like regime appearing in the Horn of Africa. A full Ethiopian military
invasion followed and by January 2007 the Union of Islamic Courts had been forced
out of power. This paved the way for the TFG to set foot in Mogadishu for the first
time since its inception but only under the protection of upwards of 8000 Ethiopian
forces. When Ethiopian forces left Somalia in January 2009 a UN-blessed African
Union force arrived in their place. Today the TFG is besieged, controlling little more
than a few blocks in Mogadishu. That it has been unable to control much more is not
for want of trying.
In January 2009 the TFG parliament saw off the divisive Abdullahi Yusuf (a
Darod clan member), the TFG’s first president. In Yusuf’s place TFG parliamenta-
rians elected Sheik Sharif Sheikh Ahmed the very chairman of the Union of
Islamic Courts they had battled in 2006 and a member of the Hawiye clan (Abgaal
subclan), the clan whose members disproportionately comprise al-Shabaab, the main
insurgent group now fighting the TFG. In February 2009 parliament and the new
president oversaw the induction of Omar Abdirashid Ali Sharmarke as prime
minister. In many ways Prime Minister Sharmarke was the TFG’s ‘4.5 Formula’
incarnate: his Darod credentials provided clan balance within the TFG’s leadership;
the assassination of his father in 1969 as the first civilian president of the Republic of
Somalia evoked broad sympathy and a historical sense of central governance; his
dual-national status as both a Somali and Canadian appealed to Somalis at home
and abroad; and finally, he and President Ahmed seemed to prefer to work together
rather than against one another, in marked contrast to the president and prime
minister who preceded Ahmed and Sharmarke. In March 2009, then, the TFG
cabinet adopted a Somali version of Islamic sharia. These moves collectively and in
quick succession the removal of Yusuf; the election of President Ahmed; the
254 B.J. Hesse
Parables of predation
The lion, the jackal, the wolf and the hyena agreed to hunt together, and to split their kills.
After cooperatively killing a camel, the lion asked ‘Who divides the meat?’
The wolf volunteered to divide the meat, as he could count. He promptly cut four
pieces, each of equal size, and placed the pieces in front of the hunters.
Angry, the lion swiped the wolf across his eyes with his massive paws and claws causing
the wolf to cower in bloodied pain. ‘Is this any way to count?’ roared the lion.
The jackal intervened. ‘The wolf does not know how to count. I will divide the meat’.
The jackal then cut three small portions for the wolf, the hyena and himself. He placed the
largest, best piece in front of the lion, who promptly collected his share and departed. The
wolf, the hyena and the jackal were left with their relative scraps.
‘Why did you give the lion such a large piece? Why is he entitled?’ asked the hyena.
‘I learned from the wolf’, replied the jackal.
‘You learned from the wolf?’ cried the hyena. ‘How can anyone learn from the wolf? He
is stupid’.
Still nursing his injured eyes, the wolf ended the debate: ‘The jackal is right. He knows
how to count. Before, when my eyes were open, I did not see. Now, though my eyes are
wounded, I see clearly’.
The above Somali parable features four main predators. Likewise, there are four
main ‘predators’ currently arrayed against the Transitional Federal Government
(TFG) in Mogadishu. They are:
the Harti subclan of the Juba River Valley (collectively referred to as ‘Harti
Waamo’ in the Juba Valley).
While events dictate which insurgent group might correspond to what animal in
the ‘Parable of the Predators’, it is clear some, probably most, desire a lion’s share of
opportunity, power and influence. Shared scraps whether in a ‘4.5 Formula’ or
some other form hold little appeal. In fact, some insurgents’ desire to exert
unrivalled control goes beyond trying to subjugate obvious enemies. At times it
means they have sought to overpower sometime- and would-be allies, as has been
seen in Kismayo.
From 2008 until late into 2009 Raas Kaambooni militiamen in the port city of
Kismayo seemed to be allied with both Hizbul Islam militiamen and al-Shabaab
militiamen. With regard to the latter, a deal had been struck where Raas Kaambooni
forces and al-Shabaab forces were to take six-month turns controlling the city port,
thereby benefitting from its lucrative import and export activity. But in October 2009
al-Shabaab leaders reneged on the arrangement. In response Raas Kaambooni
fighters mobilised to take the port by force. Fearing inter-insurgent fighting would
damage efforts to defeat their common enemies, Hizbul Islam’s leadership appealed
to Raas Kaambooni’s leaders for calm. Instead, Raas Kaambooni leaders broke with
Hizbul Islam’s leaders and commenced an attack on al-Shabaab militiamen
(Insidesomalia.org 2009a, 2009b; IRIN 2009; AEI Critical Threats 2009).
Parallels most certainly can be drawn between what happened in Kismayo in late
2009 and what occurs in ‘The Parable of the Predators’: the port could be represented
as the camel in the story; Hizbul Islam’s leadership as the jackal; Raas Kaambooni
and al-Shabaab militiamen as aspiring lions. But setting aside a Somali tradition of
symbolic storytelling, most explicitly the events show in microcosm key Somali
social, political and economic dynamics in that: a) clannism proved capable of
trumping nearly all else as Darod fought Hawiye, trumping even the ostensible
solidarity Raas Kaambooni and al-Shabaab militiamen professed to share in terms
of a common salafist religious ideology; b) clan solidarity proved susceptible to
subclan schisms, as seen when Darod clansmen in Raas Kaambooni split with their
Darod brethren in Hizbul Islam and; c) the TFG exerted little to no influence on
matters, indisposed or impotent, say, to take advantage of the insurgents’ infighting.
Ultimately it is ‘c’ which most concerns many in the international community. A
hope exists that the TFG, with its inclusive ‘4.5 Formula’, the right leaders and
correct action, can get past the historic Somali excesses associated with ‘a’ and ‘b’.
Yet this could be as futile as trying to divide a camel equally amongst unequal
predators. If past is prologue, Mogadishu-based central governance going forward
might prove just as unfeasible as it has in past decades. This begs the question: what
if the TFG in Mogadishu falls? What then?
A complete dissolution of Mogadishu-based central governance would not
necessarily lead to absolute anarchy; for example, there will continue to be
functioning governments in the northwest and northeast, in Hargeysa, Somaliland
and in Garowe, Puntland. But elsewhere in ‘Somalia’ there could be a ‘radical
localisation of politics’ (Nurhussein 2008, 10). Under such a scenario governing
authority could potentially revert more fully back to traditional sources: the shir and
the sheikh. In the former, law and order stems from collective clan discussions
(especially amongst elders) and consensus. In the latter, law and order is derived from
256 B.J. Hesse
More recently some al-Shabaab leaders have been challenged because of their
support for extreme and indiscriminate acts of violence. The first hints of dissent
came in the wake of an al-Shabaab-orchestrated suicide bombing at the Shamo Hotel
in Mogadishu on 3 December 2009. The operation killed four government ministers.
It also resulted in the deaths of 19 others, some of whom were medical students
whose graduation the ministers had come to celebrate (Hassan 2009; Geoghegan
2009). In response, a dissident branch of al-Shabaab leadership emerged, one named
‘Millat Ibrahim’. These leaders made it a point to say the Shamo Hotel attack was
excessive (UN Security Council Somalia Monitoring Group 2010, 15). That such a
dissident branch came into existence within al-Shabaab suggests at a minimum the
most extreme leaders are incapable of exercising total control over their organisation.
At most Millat Ibrahm’s emergence might be a harbinger of the marginalisation of
more radical elements. Either case might portend a change in the predatory order
Somalis have so long suffered.
Notes
1. Samaale is the mythical founder of the Somali people.
2. In Somali history there were sultanates which looked quite state-like. However, these
sultanates rarely extended sovereignty beyond the sultan’s own clan, and traditional clan
dynamics still trumped nearly all else.
3. For one of the better comprehensive breakdowns of current clan dynamics in Somalia, see
the UN Security Council Somalia Monitoring Group’s report from March 2010,
http://www.un.org/sc/committees/751/mongroup.shtml and http://daccess-dds-ny.un.org/
doc/UNDOC/GEN/N10/246/89/PDF/N1024689.pdf ?OpenElement.
258 B.J. Hesse
4. For a TFG minister’s personal, first-person account of what ‘bunker government’ life is like
see ‘Life inside Somalia’s bunker government’, Foreign Policy, 5 March 2010.
Note on contributor
Brian Hesse is an Associate Professor of Political Science at Northwest Missouri State
University in the United States. He is also a seasonal African Safari Guide for the US-based
company Cowabunga Safaris. In addition to articles in the Journal of Contemporary African
Studies, International Journal, The Journal of Asia-Pacific Affairs, African Studies Review and
other publications, Dr Hesse is the author of the book The United States, South Africa and
Africa: Of grand foreign policy and modest means. He served as guest editor for the Somalia
issue of the Journal of Contemporary African Studies and associated book. His email address is
Bhesse@nwmissouri.edu.
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