Africa

Somalia: does tourism stand a chance in Mogadishu?

August 3, 2012   ·   15 Comments

At the main entrance to the pure white sands of Lido Beach, the city’s most popular stretch of coast, we are met with a beach scene that is no different from many in Europe (ALAMY photo)

“At the main entrance to the pure white sands of Lido Beach, the city’s most popular stretch of coast, we are met with a beach scene that is no different from many in Europe” Photo: ALAMY

Mo Farah’s birthplace remains on the Foreign Office’s no-go list, but tourists are starting to visit, finds Jessica Hatcher.

MOGADISHU

Landing at the international airport in Mogadishu, our plane skims the glittering water of the Indian Ocean where the runway is built on a white sand beach. An unbroken line of jagged white dunes rises up to meet a deep blue, cloudless sky. Welcome to Somalia, east Africa’s infamous pirate coast and one of the world’s most unlikely venues for holidaymakers.

I am here to trace the early life of Britain’s Olympic long-distance runner, Mo Farah, who was born in the city in 1983. The Mogadishu his parents knew was a cosmopolitan metropolis where people gathered in the Al-Uruba Hotel to dance. “They drank wine! And beer!,” a local hoots as we pick our way through the war-strewn ruins.

Mo and his family fled the fighting that broke out in the late Eighties and descended into civil war in 1991. Since then, two decades of anarchic power struggles between clan-based militia and Islamic groups have left hundreds of thousands dead.

Until August last year, Mogadishu was partly controlled by al-Shabaab, a group affiliated with al-Qaeda. Since African Union forces drove them out, there has been a somewhat restive peace. Kidnap and ransom, improvised explosive devices and suicide bombings are still an everyday reality in Mogadishu, and African Union troops have yet to secure outlying areas. But for the first time in 20 years, the city is under central authority and people and private investors are returning.

We are met by Bashir Osman, a Somali businessman who seven years ago opened the Peace Hotel, offering secure accommodation for aid workers and journalists.

These days the hotel is accepting a new kind of guest – tourists. The trend started in late 2010, and among those walking through the elegant courtyard of the Peace Hotel have been an intrepid British man and a glamorous young American couple. But most visitors are of Somali origin – expatriates like Mo, who fled famine and fighting to Europe, the Middle East and North America. Others are returning for good to buy land or start businesses. But visiting is not a decision taken lightly. Westerners here are still targeted by pirates and for terrorist attacks from al-Shabaab and other militant groups. The country remains firmly on the Foreign Office no-go list:

“In the southern and central regions, there is ongoing serious violence, dangerous levels of criminal activity and general internal insecurity,” it warns. “There is a high threat from terrorism throughout Somalia.”

Osman picks us up at the airport in a Land Cruiser with blacked-out windows. As we drive past the roadblock at the entrance to the nearby international compound, a pickup carrying eight armed Somali men pulls out in front of us. My companion, an experienced photographer, says his heart skipped a beat – until he realised they were Osman’s security guards.

My safety concerns quickly give way to wonder at the scale of the city’s living ruins. Mogadishu’s broad boulevards are dusty, sun-bleached, bullet-ridden and litter-strewn. The debris of warfare touches everything. However, as the very first visitors have started to return, so too has construction. We drive past one man carefully grouting every bullet hole in the white stone wall of his house. Shiny new tin roofs glint in the sun and piles of building materials gather dust in the rubble.

We drive fast, hooting at donkeys and vehicles that block the road so that Osman never need take his foot off the accelerator. Beyond the airport compound, visitors used to wear flak jackets and helmets at all times; today, a pile of flak jackets gather dust in Osman’s office. He lets us lower the windows to take photos but quickly closes them again, reminding me of where we are and what that entails.

In March this year, the inaugural Turkish Airlines flight landed in Mogadishu from Ankara, the first direct connection to Europe since 1991; flights from London to Mogadishu via Ankara now take just over 12 hours.

In addition to the Peace Hotel, next to the airport, Osman is opening the Peace Apartments in the city centre for longer-term visitors and groups. Even more ambitious are his plans for an international-standard beachside resort. Osman has purchased a 500m (1,640ft) strip of land on the sand dunes that rise up above Gezira Beach to the south of the city. He faces significant obstacles: for would-be British visitors, the Foreign Office advice against travel makes insurance hard to obtain, and, although safer than it was, no white-skinned visitor here is able to leave the airport compound without security.

The maze of narrow back streets in Mogadishu reminds me of the ill-fated US military operation in the city in 1993, when US helicopters and tanks met guerrilla gunmen fighting on home turf, resulting in the deaths of 19 American soldiers. Our car pulls up abruptly in a street wide enough for just one vehicle. Along an even narrower street, Osman stops abruptly and points past an overgrown cactus: the Black Hawk Down helicopter crash site, one of the main “attractions” of this war-ravaged metropolis.

What outsiders have not seen for years is normal life in Mogadishu. We flash past street cafés and fruit sellers where the colonial flavour is still evident – loaves of light Italian bread and cappuccinos are the staple roadside refreshments.

At the main entrance to the pure white sands of Lido Beach, the city’s most popular stretch of coast, we are met with a beach scene that is no different from many in Europe. Women sit at the base of the dunes selling home-baked bread, bananas, ice cream and cold drinks. Boys and girls play in the surf; the girls, mindless of their loose-fitting hijabs, launch themselves into the waves. Young men dominate the middle beach, playing football, buzzing up and down on mopeds, and sloping into the sea to cool off.

The first person I meet is Ibrahim, a Londoner in his twenties who is playing football with a group of friends. “We’re on holiday,” he says. It is his first visit to the city and he is staying with a group of 20 Somali expats from Britain at a local guesthouse. “We came here for the beaches,” he says, as a circle quickly forms around us.

Despite the attractions of Mogadishu’s beaches, this remains a conflict zone and Osman intends to provide visitors with full security briefings. But whatever the ethics of being a bystander in a place where human suffering confronts you at every turn, for someone with a serious interest and the money to spend ($500/£320 a day for security, plus more for private insurance), Mogadishu is an eye-opening experience.

There is no doubt that legitimate private investment in Somalia will help to draw people away from lawless pursuits.

Mohamed Ibrahim, deputy prime minister of Somalia and previously a teacher at Newman Catholic College in the London borough of Brent, longs for the day when his country can benefit from the beauty of its coastline. “Now that Mogadishu is liberated, we welcome a lot of private investors, especially in the tourist sector,” he says.

Mo Farah himself hopes the security situation will improve sufficiently to enable him to return. “I would definitely like to go back to Mogadishu one day when peace is restored,” he said.

With individuals like Osman striving to improve the city, tourism has a chance – albeit, in the long run.

- Telegraph

August 3, 2012

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Readers Comments (15)

  1. jama says:

    Every will go to normal.security will improve step by step put mogadishu my birth place lived all my adult life will not be The only major city in somalia in future.There will be other big cities in somalia we can’t afford put all our eggs in one basket.

    as I rememer midd eaighties use hotel curuba friday night They were few band IFTIN-SHAREERO-SOMALI JAZ use to play westren music and somali.

    • jama says:

      correction. use to go.

  2. kaboon says:

    i don't think there will be any sort of tourism in the next 20-30 years and that is if the war stops today

    • mahmood says:

      20-30 That is way too far by That time somalis will have own space shuttle.already security is improving compare to eight month’s ago within next four years tourism will come back in full force.

  3. Abdul says:

    Since when did mo FArah became walawayn, people are forgetting he is an isaaq and his rightful pace is gabiley.

    • farxaan says:

      He was born and raised There his childhood days.i am isaaq put born in mogadishu i can’t stand with isaaqs all They talk about tribe not socializing self impose isolation no class.come up new ideas move forward.

    • Abdulahi says:

      Who said Mo Farah is from Mogadishu, he is from Hargeisa not Mogadishu if did he go to Mogadishu there today he can't come back to Somaliland with a warm welcome.

  4. somalia says:

    for sure things are changing in our homeland, let us pray for our blessed land.

  5. somalia says:

    East or West home is the best.

  6. somalia says:

    For sure my brothers of isaaq descents can u open your eyes and see the reality, Mogadishu is our capital city so i think majority of u guys here are thinking the way the southerners were thinking back in 1991, i dont think the situation in somalia currently has anything to do with clanisms, for sure we will welcome u people to come and share with us our cake coz it belong to us all, by the way dont u know the most fertile land in somalia is situated in southern area, think big young men and be like Mo Farah the real patriot not tribalist like u.

    • Abdulahi says:

      I am from Somaliland but grew up in Mogadishu left there in 1980 to North America to go study here. I been here in North America since that period. I am true Somalilander, I am really blessed with Somaliland's stability and development. Now Mogadishu is improving with its security and Somalia inshallah will be on the right path to peace and prosperity. You Somalia are my somali brother and we somalilanders are proud to have you guys as our siblings, Somalia i pray that your country gets stability inshallah i hope to Allah that happens. There is one problem We as Somalilanders will never join Somalia together as one country that will never work because of the past and the terrible civilwar that siad barre brought to Somaliland and Samatar said that he does not have remorse of he what did to Somaliland back in the early to late 1980's. So Mo farah has the awful from Somalia, so he is from Somaliland like me not Somalia. During that time Somalia had prejudice aganist isaqs it was the darod clan who brought the triblism and prejudice towards isaq. it is darod that is destroying somalia not hawyia, hawyia is fixing somalia.

      • ahmed says:

        There is no such Think call”somalilander my freind it was all lies made by The british to you and now They are not supporting your little recognition”.

        • Abdulahi says:

          There is Somalilander buddy whether you like or not and Somaliland inshallah will be recognized soon in the near future, not today or not tomorrow soon maybe in a couple of mouths or in a year or year two and you sir are liar ahmed. Somaliland is willing to do anything f Oor recognition that' s the president of Somaliland is going make radio broadcasting so the world can hear somaliland's case.
          Okay prado i know that you are upset the comments i wrote about the D clan.

  7. Jaalo says:

    There is a lot more to be found about the prospect of tourism in Mogadishu at http://www.thehumanitarianspace.com/2012/07/mogad… as this guy seems to have been following the rebuilding of the city for a long time and works there too.

  8. Kayse says:

    Some of my Isaaqis have a twisted mind. Those who arrived in Wales in the 19th century are considered Walsh while an Isaaq born in his homeland just another part, is considered foreigner to his birthplace.

    This is why their little secessionism is going no where. Mo Farah will go back to Mogadishu as a British runner not as an Isaaq runner and I'm afraid that will break your hearts kids.

    Give up qabil and lets focus on our lives as individuals. I really don't care where MO Farah goes, it has no relevance to my personal life.


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