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The Vegan Marxist
24th August 2010, 13:43
The reporting on this doesn't seem too deep on the evolving situation going on in Somalia, nor seems to give much reporting on who exactly were behind the deaths of innocent people (probably from both ends), along with very little reporting on the government of Somalia being backed by the US. We'll see how this turns out.

Al-Shabab avow 'massive' Somali war
TUESDAY, AUGUST 24, 2010

Al-Shabab fighters have attacked a hotel in Mogadishu, the Somali capital, killing at least 31 people, a day after declaring a massive war.

Members of al-Shabab, disguised as government workers, launched the attack on Tuesday at the Muna Hotel, which is known to host many Somali government officials and politicians, Al Jazeera's reporter in the city said.

Abdirahman Yariisow, Somalia's information minister, who was at the hotel, told Al Jazeera that six Somali members of parliament and five members of security were among those killed.

"It happened when two suicide bombers detonated themselves," he said.

"The security was there, but for some reason, they managed their way in and started shooting. No one was expecting this kind of atrocity.

"This shows how al-Shabab is brutal; they never respected our call [to stop the fighting] for the holy month of Ramadan."

'Final war'

The flare-up came after al-Shabab fighters declared a "massive, final" war against what they called "invaders" and attacked army barracks in several districts of Mogadishu on Monday.

Sheikh Ali Mohamoud Rage, al-Shabab's spokesman, had said on Monday that fighters were starting a new war against "invaders", an apparent reference to the 6,000 African Union troops deployed in the country to support government forces.

At least 40 people were reportedly killed and more than 100 injured in the violence that followed, medics and witnesses said.

There was an overnight lull before the fighting resumed on Tuesday morning.

The fighting came days after hundreds of Ugandan troops began arriving in the Somali capital to strengthen the current AU peacekeeping force.

"As long as these [AU] forces are in Mogadishu, I think it will be unlikely for al-Shabab to take over [the city]. But they can inflict huge damage," Dr. Afyare Abdi Elmi, a professor of International Affairs at Qatar University, told Al Jazeera.

Ugandan reinforcements arrive

Uganda said last month that it was willing to send 1,200 troops to Somalia, in addition to the 6,000 strong AMISOM mission sent by African Union countries.

"The additional troops began arriving last Friday, they were airlifted to different areas and of course they will continue to arrive," Wafula Wamunyinyi, the AU deputy special representative for Somalia, said on Monday.

Al-Shabab, which has been fighting Somalia's UN-backed government since the start of 2007, recently claimed responsibility for a twin bombing attack in Uganda, which killed more than 70 people who were watching the World Cup.

The group has said that it will continue to undertake strikes in Uganda and Burundi, in east-central Africa, as long as those countries provide troops for the AU peacekeeping force in Somalia.

Somalia has not had an effective central government for nearly 20 years and al-Shabab controls significant portions of the country.

The US and other countries say al-Shabab is linked to al-Qaeda and consider the group a terrorist organisation.

More than 21,000 Somalis have been killed in fighting since the start of the uprising, 1.5 million have been uprooted from their homes and nearly half a million are sheltering in other countries in the region.

"Civil wars end either through military victory or through a negotiated settlement," Dr. Abdi Elmi said.

"In Somalia, at least for the short term, neither is likely to happen ... the goals of the opposing forces cannot be reconciled now," he said.

"In the long run, building effective Somali security forces and functioning state is the answer."

http://english.aljazeera.net/news/africa/2010/08/201082464449278785.html

Lacrimi de Chiciură
24th August 2010, 17:07
When the rebels control most of the country except for a few blocks in Mogadishu where US-backed troops are stationed, it is pretty obvious that the "civil war" is a foreign occupation. Unfortunately, as we see in this article, the capitalist media is set on misrepresenting the issues and glossing it over with the U.S. public so they can keep Africa weak and in chains. I think the war in Somalia could be one of the most important upcoming issues if the situation continues to escalate. We need to point out the USA's involvement in the region, sending in Ethiopian troops to Somalia in 2006, tens of thousands of ultraconservative evangelical U$ neocolonialists in Kenya, and the funding of AU troops occupying Somalia. Also, we can point out the hypocrisy to those still enamored with Obama, that despite "anti-war" rhetoric, the US continues to expand the so-called "War on Terror" which is actually a war on poor people and a strawman version of Islam.

Kiev Communard
24th August 2010, 21:56
The conflict in Somalia is an archetypical case of internecine struggle between different groups of reactionaries: on the one hand, we have crypto-Islamist pro-U.S. "Federal Provisional Government", which actually has next to nothing of legitimacy in the eyes of the broad population, on the other hand, its opponents, al-Shahab and other Islamist groups, are equally anti-revolutionary and ultraconservative. In case of victory of the former, "business-friendly" regime of hypocritical neoliberals shall be installed, with the U.S. backing and virtual Ethiopian domination over Somalia. If the latter were to triumph, grim fundamentalist regime of ultra-reactionaries akin to the Taliban would be established, with all the ensuing "pleasantries". Frankly I can't decide which alternative is worse for the all-suffering people of Somalia - mostly poor pastoralists caught between fire and suffering immensely from both sides of the conflict.

Sperm-Doll Setsuna
24th August 2010, 22:41
I thought Somalia was the last bastion of true liberty, peace and prosperity from that son of old Friedman's essays. :laugh:

The Vegan Marxist
25th August 2010, 00:24
The conflict in Somalia is an archetypical case of internecine struggle between different groups of reactionaries: on the one hand, we have crypto-Islamist pro-U.S. "Federal Provisional Government", which actually has next to nothing of legitimacy in the eyes of the broad population, on the other hand, its opponents, al-Shahab and other Islamist groups, are equally anti-revolutionary and ultraconservative. In case of victory of the former, "business-friendly" regime of hypocritical neoliberals shall be installed, with the U.S. backing and virtual Ethiopian domination over Somalia. If the latter were to triumph, grim fundamentalist regime of ultra-reactionaries akin to the Taliban would be established, with all the ensuing "pleasantries". Frankly I can't decide which alternative is worse for the all-suffering people of Somalia - mostly poor pastoralists caught between fire and suffering immensely from both sides of the conflict.

I appreciate your response & analysis, but could you at least dwell us longer on said analysis with some links if you may. If not links, maybe some books if possible?