I have
hurriedly written this response after having read
the
article titled:
Why
Kenya and Ethiopia ought to annex and divide Somalia
by Donald Kipkorir posted to
the Daily Nation website on 3rd October 2008 and which has
then been circulated to many Somali websites I’ve lately surfed.
For
a start, I actually found Kipkorir’s article quite amusing and weird
as it was not an intelligently thought piece of writing but rather was
marked by author’s deep ignorance of history of Somalia and his brain-washed
colonially influenced mindset which is solely based on western imperialist
thinking of 18th and 19th Centuries of which Kenya
was also a victim and was not apparently at par with the reality of
21st Century Contemporary Global Affairs where America as
the sole hegemon can not yield any result in the invasion of Iraq –
a sovereign country - she unilaterally attacked in the name of
global terrorism but as a result is finding herself in an unforeseen
dire financial crisis similar to that of 1929 Wall-Street crash which
ultimately led to the Great Depression and where even $900 billion bail-out
recently approved to be injected to US economy is not the answer
to the problem as already pointed out by many financial analysts across
the globe.
The
author seems to be in need of some sort of history lesson as he ignorantly
argued in his article:
since 1960, the country [Somalia] has been
a lawless state that is a haven for terrorists and pirates”.
Had this been substantiated it would have been a good argument by author
but it is one based on prejudice and paranoia and to which no factual
analysis or substance was presented whatsoever.
Historically,
Somalia got independence on 1st July 1960 three years before
Kenya tasted her independence from Britain on 12th Dec 1963.
Somalia became the first African country to have democratically held
free and fair elections where a new president was smoothly elected whereby
Kenya was solely ruled by Jomo Kenyatta since independence until his
death in 1978 and taken over by Daniel Arap Moi who, due to international
pressure, was politically forced to step down in 2002 and succeeded
by Mwai Kibaki whose second term election was bitterly disputed and
denounced as “rigged” by his rival, Rail Odinga, and were later
agreed as “seriously flawed” by European Union observers.
Having
studied my BA of International Business Administration at United States
International University (USIU) in Nairobi and being a victim of Somalia
civil-war and the inevitable anarchy ensued, I was really shocked to
see the international news headlines dominated by the violence and appalling
atrocities committed by politically and ethnically-charged Kenyans armed
with machetes and arrows being shown on TVs around the world that unleashed
two months of political stalemate as a result of the vote-rigging of
Kibaki’s re-election in Dec 2007.
The
incumbent Kenya president, Kibaki, is a member of Kenya’s largest
and probably most powerful ethnic group, Kikuyu, who roughly constitute
22 percent of the population whilst his rival, Odinga, is a member of
the Luo, who comprise some 13 percent of the populace and predominantly
inhabit in western Kenya. Had it not been the intervention and the pressure
of the international community and the UN-sponsored talks in late Feb
to mediate a peace accord to which Odinga was silenced by the appointment
of the restored position of the Prime Minister, by now Kenya would have
followed suit of Somalia and been in ashes.
Frankly
speaking, both Kenya and Somali have a lot in common, i.e. deliberately
stoked ethnic tensions, feeble democratic traditions and intuitions,
power-hungry elites vying for power and scare resources of which authority
is used as means of richening and fattening their respective clans.
However,
to argue that Somali has been a lawless country since 1960 is truly
based on the ignorance and bias of the author whose knowledge of the
country in question is only limited to the past 18 years that Somalia
has been descended into political unrest due to the civil war that broke
out in 1991 as a result of the bad governance, misappropriation of public
funds and the dictatorship of the military ruler of 21 years who came
to power by coup as with a lot of African leaders.
To
come back to the core of Kipkorir’s article which argues that:
Kenya is an existential enemy of Arab Countries
… [therefore]…
annexing Somalia is thus in our strategic
interest [for Kenya and Ethiopia]
and we must do it now as the
financial meltdown continues to take away the attention of the world.
And further uses the term a ‘
fait accompli’.

This is the
envisaged map to which Somali would be dismembered and divided between
Somali according to Kipkorir’s dream
.
As
I said earlier, this is not the world of 19th Century where
that imperialist mentality of divide and rule could easily be exercised
and any imperialist state/power would then need to present a fait accompli
to the world or, to one of the superpowers at the time, in the annexation
of another sovereign country.
It
is regrettably unfortunate for someone like Kipkorir, whose own country
had indescribably suffered and gone through long period of devastation
and humiliation at the hands of the British colonial rule to suggest
that Somalia to be annexed and divided between Kenya and Ethiopia and
then a fait accompli to be presented to the World in the cloak of current
global financial turmoil, I would, thus, say and advise Kipkorir to
apologise to the people of Somalia for the poisonous article and
wake up to the current global reality that even the world’s sole super
power can not forcefully uproot the local insurgents in Iraq or Afghanistan
for that matter with the help of NATO military capability and might
present on the ground.
Read
Kipkorir’s article here:
http://www.nation.co.ke/oped/
Opinion/-/440808/476952/-/
3lvt45/-/index.html
In
other words, I’ll ask a question here: Is the author day-dreaming
or is he over-estimating Kenyan’s military capability and her current
situation? Or that of Ethiopia even if both combined together?
It is not a secret that Ethiopia has some 30, 000 troops deployed in
Somalia with the consent of the Somali government and parliament and
the blessing of the international community plus the direct political
and military support of America and could hardly pacify and stabilise
a single district of Mogadishu let alone conquer Somalia as a whole.
I would
like to quote brief excerpt of speech by American President, Woodrow
Wilson, on 8th Jan 1918 – great champion of self-determination
and independence of states:
“…
the day of conquest and aggrandizement is gone by; so is also
the day of secret covenants entered into the interest of particular
governments and likely at some-unlooked-for-moment to upset the peace
of the world….”
One year later July
1919 Wilson said after the destructive World War I that German militarists
and imperalists had initiated :
"For
my own part, I am as intolerant of imperialistic designs on the part
of other nations as I was of such designs on the part of Germany. The
choice is between two ideals; on the one hand, the ideal of democracy,
which represents the rights of free peoples and states
everywhere to govern themselves, and, the ideal of imperialism which
seeks to dominate for force and unjust power, an ideal which is by no
means dead and which is earnestly [sought] in many quarters."
I do quote the above
just to remind Kipkorir and those who might share the same views if
any to rethink that Somalia has been/is going through a process of civil-war
and anarchy which many powerful states today such as America (1861-1865)
and Spain (1820 – 1823 and 1936-1939) had gone through.
Surely with the help
and resources of estimated 1.5 million Somali Diaspora around the globe
like Jews did with the rebirth of Israel, Somalia will one day pull
through this and stand on feet as a viable, democratic and prosperous
state living side by side with her neighbours in peace and security
and that would be the interest of the region as a whole and particularly
for Kenya and Ethiopia, so now
is
the right time for
both countries
or any other state to take the opportunity and help Somalia stabilise
and regain her status in the globe.
And finally history
will record who has and hasn’t helped Somalia during these harsh times,
as the proverb says
a friend in need is a friend indeed.
fandhaal@hotmail.co.uk
Abdifatah Fandhaal
is currently residing in Britain and
a student of International Relations (IR) and Political Studies at London
Metropolitan University in London -
UK.