|
By Abdullahi Ahmed Barise and Elmi (Dubai and canada)
Violence against Somali civilians paid off handsomely for the
warlords and the hostile neighbours who supported them. These
warlords and their foreign backers selected the members of the
newly created 275-member parliament, thus concluding the peace
process held in Kenya last month. The regional organization,
Inter-Governmental Authority on Development (IGAD), which
sponsored the talks, utilized a sham process to produce the
results that Ethiopia and Kenya, Somalia's historic enemies,
wanted. It has broken all the rules and procedures set for the
conference. Contradicting its earlier official position
(political leaders, warlords and the traditional leaders would
select MPs at the sub-clan level), IGAD has implemented the
Ethiopian plan that the Somali warlords should select the MPs.
Unfortunately, this bogus process leaves civil society and
women's representation to the warlords' justice. Although the
interim charter reserved 12 per cent of the seats for women, few
women ended up becoming parliamentarians. IGAD has also denied a
feasible role for traditional and religious leaders, and
civil-society groups.
As the human-rights records of many of the individuals in the
parliament and the illegal process that IGAD approved show, the
illegitimate institution born in Nairobi cannot be expected to
respect human rights, end the civil war or create democracy. In
fact, if their culture and past behaviour show anything, these
warlords cannot even work together.
Moreover, the process used sends a horrible message that the
more one abused human rights, the more privileges one would get
in selecting the MPs of his clan and, sometimes, for other
clans.
The relevant question is: What can be done? Should the Somali
people and the international community give another chance to
the warlords and those who used them as proxies for the past 14
years?
As biased and illegitimate as the process was, and as
unacceptable as the result is, there are steps that can be taken
to limit the potential abuses that these warlords and their
foreign supporters could inflict on Somali civilians.
Abuse of power and military repression are among the root
causes of the Somali conflict. The interim charter that Ethiopia
and Kenya forced on the Somalis must be revisited, perhaps by
Somali experts. It is necessary to create a powerful upper house
that actually represents the clan constituencies in the country.
The current parliament represents the warlords, and political
factions. Moreover, there is an urgent need to create a
human-rights tribunal that investigates past and present
human-rights atrocities. Besides guarding the system against
abuses, these two institutions would also help address the trust
deficit among the Somali clans.
There is a widespread belief among Somalis that Ethiopia,
even if its political proxies become leaders, is determined to
block any genuine attempt to re-establish Somalia as a state. It
has been the most important destabilizing factor in Somalia. It
has helped warlords to wage and perpetuate the civil war. It has
been sending arms to Somalia, thus violating Security Council
Resolution 733. Ethiopia has also undermined previous peace
initiatives, such as the Cairo peace accord in 1997 and Arta
peace process in 2000. By keeping Somalia in the status quo,
Ethiopia believes that it would eliminate a historic enemy. The
world must watch closely the behaviour of this hostile neighbour.
To enhance Somalia's chance for peace, the United Nations
must become more involved in the country's peace-building
efforts and provide sustained and timely assistance. The U.S.
government and the European Union could also play an important
role in ending the civil war. Since they provide most of the
aid, diplomatic pressure on Ethiopia and Kenya from Washington
and Brussels could make all the difference.
Finally, peacekeeping forces will be required to create a
secure environment, disarm the warlords and train strong Somali
police and military forces. This is an important and sensitive
issue. How this is managed will make or break the peace effort.
Peacekeeping forces from the Muslim countries would have
fewer problems than the proposed African peacekeeping forces.
Such a step would also deny an opportunity to those who want to
spoil or undermine the peace process to use cultural, health or
religious justifications.
The Somali conflict is "ripe for resolution." A
widespread realization exists that no faction or clan can impose
its will on others by force; there is a growing civil society in
most parts of Somalia, particularly in the areas of education
and media. Somalis in the diaspora are significantly
contributing to the stabilization and reconstruction of the
country.
As happened in Mozambique - a successful peace-building case
in Africa - if the hostile neighbours and the warlords are
controlled, Somali people will get a durable peace. On the other
hand, imposing the Ethiopian-backed warlords on the Somali
people, without the checks needed, would restart the civil war.
The inauguration of an illegitimate parliament should not
give the perception that peace has been achieved. The Somali
experience shows signing papers and swearing ceremonies do not
bring peace. It is the implementation that matters. The
conclusion of the Nairobi peace process should be seen as a
first step of a long journey, and a bad one at that.
Abdullahi Ahmed Barise is a professor of psychology at Zayed
University in Dubai. Afyare A. Elmi is a graduate student at the
University of Toronto. Both are Somali Canadians.
The
Rise and Sudden Fall of Abdiqassim
Geeska
Afrika Online series, we will look at a trail of Strategic events,
deceptions, sabotage and intrigue that Ethiopia, Kenya, Djibouti,
Libya, Egypt, Arab League, Qatar and Yemeni governments have
played in the TNG (Arta) process and the role SRRC, Somali Business
community, Diaspora
Warlords, BBC Somali
Services, Southern Warlords, Puntland, Somaliland and other opposition
members play in Somalia. Next Week... (Click
Full Story)
|