Africa

SOMALIA: Next stop Kismayo

August 17, 2012   ·   12 Comments

2012-07-31T055700Z_1_AJOE86U0GJ300_RTROPTP_2_OZATP-USA-SOMALIA-SHABAAB-20120731

NAIROBI/MOGADISHU, 15 August 2012 (IRIN) – Even before it kicks off in earnest, the assault on Somalia’s port city of Kismayo is causing jitters.

A preliminary push by UN-backed African Union troops on the last bastion of Somalia’s Al-Shabab insurgency has already added to Somalia’s civilian casualties, and there are fears that more may lie ahead as air, ground and naval operations in the strategic city escalate.

The latest, and most senior, person to raise the alarm over the actions of the Kenyan Defence Forces (KDF), which officially operate under the banner of the African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM), was UN Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator Mark Bowden.

“I am deeply concerned by recent reports of civilian casualties in Kismayo caused by naval gunfire and airstrikes,” Bowden said in a statement issued on 14 August.

“As fighting for control of the town appears imminent, I reiterate my call for all parties to the conflict to make every effort to minimize the impact of conflict on civilians and to allow full humanitarian access to all people in need,” he said.

An NGO official working on Somalia told IRIN that aid workers were worried there would be “an increase in indiscriminate shelling and large-scale civilian casualties.

“Furthermore, civilians may get trapped in between fighting forces, further restricting their access to life-saving support and humanitarian assistance in an area that is of great humanitarian need – need that is barely properly assessed due access restrictions,” said the official.

Al-Shabab has banned many aid agencies from Kismayo, and general insecurity in the area has also impeded humanitarian access.

The city has a population of 90,000, with another 77,000 living in surrounding areas. Thanks to illegal exports of charcoal, the port is a major source of the insurgency’s income. The city is also likely to become the capital of a proposed semi-autonomous region under the country’s imminent federal government – a region sometimes referred to as the Jubaland Initiative.

International humanitarian law

Human rights organizations say all parties to Somalia’s conflict – AMISOM, the forces of the outgoing Transitional Federal Government (TFG), Al-Shabab and other armed groups – have violated International Humanitarian Law, chiefly through the use of indiscriminate fire. Between August 2010 and August 2011, there were 4,000 combat-related civilian casualties in Somalia, including 1,000 deaths, according to Human Rights Watch (HRW).

A full assessment of the population will only be possible when the situation on the ground permits. UN Department of Safety and Security clearance is required before UN agencies can operate in any area.

According to UNOSAT, in mid-May there were about 4,000 dwellings for internally displaced people in two dozen sites around the city.

MSF, which conducts emergency operations in Kismayo, said in July that cases of acute watery diarrhoea were on the rise, in part due to a ban on the use of chlorine.

“Kismayo’s dense population means that a widespread outbreak could easily occur if urgent prevention measures are not taken,” MSF said in a statement, noting that its own limited resources had been “overloaded” by patients and that “a larger facility was needed to treat the increasing number of cases.”

The Al-Shabab-controlled general hospital was recently reported to be admitting some 40 suspected cases of cholera every week.

Omar Saleh, the World Health Organization’s emergency health coordinator for Somalia told IRIN other concerns in Kismayo included a lack of trained health personnel and that, because of access problems, “no vaccinations had been carried out since 2009”.

He said there was a “very high risk” of mass casualties due to communicable diseases such as cholera and measles.

Saleh said the top health priorities now were increasing “access to safe water and sanitation, and to medical supplies, emergency surgery and trauma kits. A humanitarian corridor has to be negotiated and created.”

Kismayo after Al-Shabab

Whether Al-Shabab is routed from Kismayo or withdraws quietly, few believe its departure will lead to immediate stability.

“International military interventions in Somalia have been plagued by unforeseen consequences,” said Chatham House analyst Adjoa Anyimadu.

“No one’s giving much attention to the idea that civilians suffering under Al-Shabab could find they are suffering again” once they leave, he said.

Laetitia Bader, a researcher at HRW, says there has been a rise in insecurity in several southern Somali towns, including Beledweyne, Baidoa and Afgoye, since Al-Shabab left them.

“Donors see the withdrawal of the Al-Shabab as an opportunity, but they need to be aware of the other actors they’ll be dealing with,” she said.

Documented crimes by other actors, including pro-government militia groups, include summary execution.

Other NGOs have noted a decline in security in “liberated” towns and warn that for humanitarians, even if towns are under government control, many of the rural areas surrounding them – such as the hills overlooking Kismayo – could remain under Al-Shabab control, hampering any immediate improvement in humanitarian access.

Kismayo was fought over by rival clans long before Al-Shabab emerged as a player. “Its strategic importance, as an all-weather port in Somalia’s most fertile region, ensures a strong position for those governing the city,” said James Smith, an analyst with Rift Valley Institute.

“Al-Shabab’s presence has guaranteed a degree of stability in Kismayo. If forced out, competition for control of the city may result in inter-clan conflict in the region,” said Smith.

One aid worker who asked not to be named said there was a danger of a “governance vacuum in Kismayo, as various forces will vie for control, influence and power. It would be good to know what governance plans are being drawn up.”

At the national level, the TFG’s mandate expires on 20 August, when new, theoretically more sustainable, governance structures take hold.

Source: IRIN

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Readers Comments (12)

  1. kaboon says:

    maybe they will stop people from eating hyena meat

    • Somaliaqueen says:

      Kkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk are you for real? Its Al shabab who telling its halal to eat hyena, Wallahi we have to stop them. Telling lias about the islam, since when is it hala to eat hyena? That show al shaba r fake.

      • khaatumo citizen says:

        Kaboon u wouldn't mind eating hyena would u? it's delicious u should taste. lool

        • Puntland geezer says:

          I think kaboon bony meat is more delicious than a hyena.

          • khaatumo citizen says:

            Puntland Geezer hahaha his skinny **ss is no where near hyena meat.

             
    • Ayanle says:

      It is al Shabaab that autorize hyena meat consumption. And we
      All know where the people in charge of al shabab came from !
      Certainly not from somalia Kaboon :p

  2. Abdi2 says:

    Kaboon, stop being childish and grow up.

    In my opinion, time has come to eradicate these evil doers..Alshebabe and their supporters. The longer they go on, the bigger the risk of them corrupting our deen, youth and culture. We need to stand together from Somaliland to Somalia to fight this menace, God Help us!

  3. Gee says:

    These guys have nothing to feed the people they oppress; making the hayna's meat Halal is means of creating income, or let us call Shabaab's food security strategy.

  4. Puntland geezer says:

    @kaboon hyena meat is the answer for our skinny somali men, we like dead man walking, no wonder somaliqueen is running after jareer.

    • ciise says:

      the women and men are very ugly but it depends on were you are. like your dar00d women are like a curse on a mans eyes, hence dar00d men marry haw#1yeor iss@q women

      '

      • khaatumo citizen says:

        loool Ciise you really are a pathetic excuse for a human being, sick minded person, Somali people are basically like Chinese they all look alike. go back to the Marfish you Murqaan freak

  5. mohamed cheers says:

    Everything else regardless, in my poor mind, how the theoretically, the new Roadmap taking over
    after August 20/12 would sustain itself with so much chaos and unconstitutional Foreign
    exploitation powers backed by strong equally unconstitutional foreign military excursions of
    Amisom compounded by Ethiopian/Kenyan all out war against the failed without peoples
    Civil Liberties functioning Govt in place since 1991???…To be honest, I have my doubts that
    the roadmap might bring everlasting comprehensive solutions even if/when the Alshabab is
    done with and eliminated which's not yet far from over!. Let's face the facts…Somalia crisis
    might be able to find real resolves if/when only the all inclusive peoples Civil liberties take
    hold of their country's destiny without outside interferences. I also do think that if Alshabab fighters
    are defeated there's always the probablity that a new more stronger underdog the UIC Wing type
    might emerge…from within the new roadmap…then what??
    Cheers.


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