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Inside Africa’s Guantánamo
The Only Way The US Can Prop Up Its Client Regime in Somalia Is Through Lawlessness and Slaughter

by Salim Lone

This is the most lawless war of our generation. All wars of aggression lack legitimacy, but no conflict in recent memory has witnessed such mounting layers of illegality as the current one in Somalia. Violations of the UN charter and of international humanitarian law are regrettably commonplace in our age, and they abound in the carnage that the world is allowing to unfold in Mogadishu, but this war has in addition explicitly violated two UN security council resolutions. To complete the picture, one of these resolutions contravenes the charter itself.

The complete impunity with which Ethiopia and the transitional Somali government have been allowed to violate these resolutions explains the ruthlessness of the military assaults that have been under way for six weeks now. The details of the atrocities being committed were formally acknowledged by a western government for the first time when Germany, which holds the current EU presidency, had its ambassador to Somalia, Walter Lindner, write a tough letter - made public on Wednesday - to Somalia’s president, Abdullahi Yusuf.The letter condemned the indiscriminate use of air strikes and heavy artillery in Mogadishu’s densely populated areas, the raping of women, the deliberate blocking of urgently needed food and humanitarian supplies, and the bombing of hospitals. This is a relentless drive to terrify and intimidate civilians belonging to clans from whose ranks fighters are challenging the occupation.

There was a time when security council resolutions were hallowed in most of the world, as for example resolution 242 demanding the return of occupied Palestine territory in exchange for peace. But in our new world order, the powerful decide which UN resolutions are passed, and whether they need to be honoured. So the United States, which was violating the UN arms embargo on Somalia, rushed through another resolution in December that it thought would better serve US goals - and then proceeded to violate that one as well.

The new resolution forbade neighbouring countries from being part of the regional peacekeeping force the security council authorised for Somalia; but Ethiopia went much further and unilaterally invaded, with the covert assistance of the US - which also joined the war by bombing Somalia.

This December resolution actually contravened the charter itself, because it made the security council the aggressor and turned a clearly peaceful situation into war. The resolution linked the Islamic Courts government to international terrorism and mandated peacekeeping force, on the basis of chapter VII of the UN charter, to address the “threat to international peace and security” that Somalia posed - when every independent account, including Chatham House’s on Wednesday, indicated that the country was experiencing its first peace and security since 1991.

The resolution paved the way for the Ethiopian invasion that has led to the bitter conflict that many independent analysts, including those at a meeting in Addis Ababa organised by Ethiopia’s Inter-Africa Group, had warned would be the inevitable result. A government imposed through force by arch enemy Ethiopia was never going to hold sway.

The long silence and the refusal even now to announce measures that might arrest this slaughter mark the lowest point in the big powers’ abdication of the “Responsibility to Protect” mandate - adopted, with British leadership, at a summit-level meeting of the security council two years ago. The world’s most impoverished people are now being ripped to shreds with no effort whatsoever to get the perpetrators to desist.

A huge campaign must be launched to press western governments to end this slaughter, which is almost entirely the work of those in control of the country. The European Union warned a month ago that war crimes might have been committed in an assault on the capital last month - in which the EU could be complicit because of its large-scale support for those accused of the crimes. Human Rights Watch has documented how Kenya and Ethiopia had turned this region into Africa’s own version of Guantánamo Bay, replete with kidnappings, extraordinary renditions, secret prisons and large numbers of “disappeared”: a project that carries the Made in America label. Allowing free rein to such comprehensive lawlessness is a stain on all those who might have, at a minimum, curtailed it.

Work must begin to derail the astounding proposal from the United Nations secretary general, Ban Ki-Moon, which is to be discussed by the security council in mid-June. He would like to mount a UN-sanctioned “coalition of the willing” to enforce peace and restore order in Somalia - in other words, the UN would help Ethiopia and the United States achieve what their own illegal military interventions have failed to accomplish: the entrenchment of a client regime that lacks any popular support. Such an operation is unlikely to succeed in any event, but it could further threaten the turbulent Horn of Africa, which is already teetering on the brink of chaos.

The Somali government is busy crying “al-Qaida” at every turn and offering lucrative deals to oil companies, in a bid to entice greater western support. But this war was lost long ago. In turning to the arch enemy Ethiopia, the transitional government’s fate was sealed: the nation will not abide an Ethiopian-US occupation.

Only a political solution will resolve this crisis. Africa must step up to the plate and show spine and leadership in a drive to protect its civilians, and work with Europe and the UN to convince the US to swiftly terminate its latest destabilising adventure.

Salim Lone, who was the spokesman for the UN mission in Iraq after the 2003 invasion, is a columnist for the Daily Nation in Kenya
salimlone@yahoo.com

© 2007 The Guardian

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8 Comments so far

  1. cedross April 28th, 2007 8:13 pm

    The UN has lost any moral authority it ever had. It has been shown to be a tool of the United States. When the United States needs something, it uses the UN as tool to legitimize its usually illegal actions. If the UN fails to do its bidding - which is rare - the United States just ignores the UN and tells the world that the UN is of no use any more - which actually is the truth. I truly believe that the rest of the world should create another organization which does not include the United States - an organzation which would really fulfill the original mandate of the orginal UN. In this organization there would be no members with vetoes and every debate would be resolved by a vote among the members with each country having equal standing. It would have a charter, which if violated by any members, would cause the immediate expulsion of the violating member. In the case of a member violating the charter by attacking another country - the country that was attacked would be backed up and defended by a standing military force - at the disposal of this new organization - which is comprised of member countries and the attacking country would be forced out.

    As the UN is now - it has backed and legitimized the illegal attack and occupation of Iraq by the United States. The United States has not even been accused by the UN of violating its charter - is there a reason for this other then the UN is completely doing the bidding of the United States - whatever it does. I certainly hope for better days because it can’t get any worse then it currently is.

  2. Tijuanalibre April 28th, 2007 8:41 pm

    News flash. President George W Bush announced that the slaughter in Somalia has to stop, and is sending in two infantry divisions as peacekeepers to disarm the militias. Progressives everywhere attack him for intervening in the affairs of a sovereign state…..

  3. Poet April 28th, 2007 10:12 pm

    For a humerous take on this latest attrocity of America Inc. plese see “outa Africa” by Mark Fiore. You can find it at:

    http://www.markfiore.com/animation/outta.html

    Because sometimes you have to laugh to keep from crying.

  4. Paul M April 29th, 2007 12:40 am

    The UN was created by the nations that won the second world war, and by which they intended to govern the world that they won. They gave themselves permanent security council seats - the right to veto anything that comes through. It is that mechanism that deprives the UN of its legitimacy. It can be fixed several ways

    - no security council
    - no permanent seats on the security council
    - veto requires at least 1/3 of the seats (ie, passing anything needs a supermajority)

    but the current situation, where any of the winners of WWII can block anything contrary to their national intersts, hs got to go.

  5. gyptian April 29th, 2007 4:55 am

    The UN needs to be dismantled. Any organization that acts as a front to criminal western powers has absolutely no moral authority to act on behalf of the world community. The UN is essentially a condom used by the US and its cronies while it rapes the ‘Third World’. Its disgusting, sad and profoundly disturbing.

  6. Tijuanalibre April 29th, 2007 9:24 pm

    I like that. “Criminal western powers”. Not a word about the undemocratic gangster regimes in Zimbabwe, Cuba, North Korea, Iran, Belarus, or inumerous other places, who put more people in cages and torture more people in one day than George Bush could dream about for a year. Nor a word about countries such as Timor Leste or Bosnia, freed from oppression by these same “criminal powers”. I guess it is only criminal if the power is white.

  7. gyptian April 30th, 2007 3:00 am

    I dont need to say a word about the countries you mentioned because the mainstream media does a stellar job about denouncing the very countries you mentioned almost every day …. while completely ignoring our very own criminal acts. All you gotta do is read up on the history of the last 50 years of US foreign policy … if our acts around the globe are not criminal then nothing is. Oh yes … we also happen to be white.

    This ridiculous belief that we ‘free oppressed people’ is hogwash plain and simple. The US Empire and our European forebears never had any intention of freeing oppressed people unless it became politically inconvenient or commercially prudent.

  8. DCNative April 30th, 2007 3:35 pm

    Tijuanalibre would do well with some reading.
    The unarmed citizens of East Timor, 1/3 of them were murdered by Indonesian soldiers, armed and trained by the US government. Ford and Kissinger met with Suharto and gave him a champagne toast go-ahead.
    North Korea, Iran, Belarus are not run by Bush. They did not illegally invade Iraq, an act that has let to the deaths of tens of thousands. Bush is as white as they get and as criminal as they come. WE are supposed to be better than rogue nations, not joining in with them.

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