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Tafelberg Short: Somalia - Fixing Africa's Most Failed State
Tafelberg Short: Somalia - Fixing Africa's Most Failed State
Tafelberg Short: Somalia - Fixing Africa's Most Failed State
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Tafelberg Short: Somalia - Fixing Africa's Most Failed State

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Lowest down on the Failed State Index for five years running, Somalia has been described as 'destroyed', 'stateless' and 'ravaged'. Yet is also a place of promise... In this concise and compelling book, three internationally recognised experts on Africa examine the Somalian crisis. Comparing Somalia to neighbouring Somaliland, from the historical background up to the present, and looking into the effect of international intervention, this book provides an astute, sometimes surprising analysis pointing to the power of local ownership. Authoritative and thought-provoking, with many a lesson for stabilising failed states, Somalia - Fixing Africa's Most Failed State is both timely and useful.
LanguageEnglish
PublisherTafelberg
Release dateMar 22, 2013
ISBN9780624063292
Tafelberg Short: Somalia - Fixing Africa's Most Failed State
Author

Greg Mills

Dr Greg Mills heads the Johannesburg-based Brenthurst Foundation, established in 2005 by the Oppenheimer family to strengthen Africa's economic performance. He has published more than 25 books and has lectured at universities and institutions in Africa and abroad.

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    Book preview

    Tafelberg Short - Greg Mills

    Tafelberg Short

    Somalia – Fixing Africa’s Most Failed State

    Greg Mills, J. Peter Pham and David Kilcullen

    Tafelberg

    Chapter 01

    Somalia: the archetypal failed state

    Dotted-Line

    In 1941, Conrad Norton and Uys Krige wrote of the ‘White City of Mogadiscio, Capital of Italian Somaliland, [a] town won by man from the desert. . . . Literally without a tree, a shrub or a bush, Mogadiscio clings to the edge of the desert, strikingly picturesque with its snow-white buildings, many of great antiquity, its slender white towers, minarets and cupolas, and its rose-red Arab mosque. Towards evening, the town is invested with the most delicate pastel colours, and the encircling red sand-dunes glow like rubies lit by an inner fire.’¹

    Today, the picture is very different.²

    As one measure, the language associated with the Horn of Africa country of Somalia (from which the self-declared Republic of Somaliland broke away in 1991) is virtually uniformly negative. It is usually deemed to have been ‘destroyed’, is ‘failed’ or ‘ravaged’, ‘a territory without a state’ or ‘stateless’. British Foreign Secretary William Hague referred to Somalia as ‘the world’s most failed state’.³ Mogadishu is ‘Africa’s most wounded city’, the capital of a country where ‘descriptions of chaos, hunger and anarchy’ abound, with problems ranging from ‘religionist authoritarianism’ to ‘clans’ to ‘foreign interests’.⁴

    To take a somewhat more quantitative benchmark, by 2012 Somalia had been listed for five straight years at the bottom of the ‘Failed States Index’ published annually by the Fund for Peace and Foreign Policy magazine.⁵ Indeed, it has become the archetypal failed state,⁶ a caricature of misery, dearth and excess to which photojournalists travel in search of images of destruction, collapse, human suffering and helplessness. And it’s not hard to find them.

    Parts of Mogadishu today look like those pictures one sees in sepia of Ypres or Amiens or Stalingrad or Berlin. In the old part of town, in the area around the once-prestigious Lido Beach, the shells of buildings, pockmarked carcasses of war, form monuments to more than two decades of fighting, most recently between the African Union’s peacekeepers (known widely as Amisom – the AU Mission in Somalia) and the militant jihadist Al-Shabaab movement. The roads are unpaved, less a path than bucking bronco, testament to decades of no investment; there is rubbish everywhere, smouldering underneath the human and goat scavengers, with plastic bags flying and lying around. The grandstand at Tarabunka, where the former dictator Mohamed Siad Barre took the salute of his armed forces, is a tangled mess of concrete and reinforced steel, discarded car chassis and panels, and pathetic refugee shelters and shops.

    Image797.JPG

    Somalia has more than 1.2 million refugees, including 300,000 in Mogadishu alone, among them these in Camp 77.

    And the locals say things have really improved recently.

    On the western outskirts of the city there are thousands of refugees crammed into Sonak and Camp 77, enveloping the once-proud Gaheyr University facilities. When one turns off towards the old stadium (now a camp for some of the 300,000 internally displaced people in Mogadishu, from more than 1.2 million countrywide) just after Village Restaurant where two suicide bombers killed themselves and a dozen civilians in an attack shortly after the election by parliament of a new president in September 2012, the Bakara market complex beckons, a site for regular Al-Shabaab suicide bombings and assassinations. Regardless, it remains a hive of commercial activity. People go about their business on foot and donkey carts, peddling petrol, fussing outside brightly decorated premises advertising building material and auto spares, with women constantly moving in brightly coloured scarves and veils like flares in the dusty gloom.

    Image808.JPG

    Years of war have placed Somalia at the bottom of the ‘Failed States Index’ for five straight years, and the effects are visible everywhere.

    But Somalia is also said to be a ‘place of great promise’, one of those ‘opportunities in a lifetime,’ as a Mogadishu businessman has put it, ‘when you can start at the bottom, all over again’. It has bountiful fisheries, as befits a country with a 3,300km coastline, the longest in continental Africa, now that the pirates have forced those fishing illegally to think again. It has a great Dubai-like location, ‘a portal’ between the Gulf and Arabia and Africa. It exported a record 4.2 million head of livestock in 2010,⁷ mostly to the Gulf and Saudi Arabia through Berbera (in Somaliland) and Bossaso (in Puntland), and has the potential for as much as 110 billion barrels of oil.⁸

    And it is remarkable

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