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My Life as a Diplomat
By NURUDDIN FARAH
May 26, 2007
Cape Town
WATCHING from afar, people find it difficult to
understand the intractability of the conflict in
Somalia. The cycle of violence, almost mysteriously,
remains uninterrupted. Peace breaks out. Victory is
declared, as it was a couple of weeks ago when
President Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed’s Transitional
Federal Government declared its triumph over the
rival Islamic Courts Union and the clan-based
militia fighting alongside it. And then the violence
quickly erupts again.

In Somalia, it has been clan versus clan, Muslim
Somalis versus Christian Ethiopians, for as long as
anyone can remember. A recent United Nations report
asserted that a dozen or so countries — Egypt,
Eritrea and Iran among them — are engaged in trying
to destabilize Somalia.
Why can’t Somalia arrest its downward spiral?
Well, let me tell you about my brief time as an
emissary between Somalia’s two main warring
factions; perhaps it might help explain in concrete
— and human — terms why the conflict has become so
difficult to solve and why the transitional
government, backed by the United States and with the
support of Ethiopia, is probably doomed to fail.
My career as an emissary began last July. A man in
the executive directorate of the Islamic Courts
Union, then in control of Mogadishu, telephoned me
in Cape Town, where I now live. (I was born and
raised in Somalia.) The man, who shall remain
nameless, asked if I would “carry fire between the
two sides,” as the Somali idiom has it.
The timing was understandable. Talks between the
Islamists and the government had broken down; the
Islamists were laying siege to Baidoa, the seat of
the government, and Ethiopia was sending troops to
defend the garrisoned town.
The choice of a mediator, however, wasn’t so readily
apparent. “Why me?” I asked.
“Because the I.C.U. admires your opposition to
Ethiopia, Somalia’s archenemy, and because of your
avowed interest in peace,” he replied.
And, truth be told, I admired some of what the
Islamists had accomplished. Indeed, they had done
the impossible: in a series of fierce battles from
March to June last year, they had routed the
warlords and pacified Mogadishu. For the first time
in many years, the city enjoyed peace.
Like many Somalis, though, I also had my
reservations about them. Even though almost all
Somalis are Muslim, very few embrace the union’s
fervent brand of faith: the group supports Shariah
law and it treats the federal charter, which is
secular, with disdain. Then there was the matter of
clan rivalry, which hinted that devotion might be
masking politics: the top Islamists belonged to the
clans known to be antagonistic to the president’s
clan.
Of course, my feelings about the transitional
government were also ambivalent. The government came
into being in 2004 after a two-year-long national
reconciliation conference held in exile. I supported
the president’s desire for an African peacekeeping
force to stabilize Somalia; at the same time, I was
fearful that he was susceptible to pressure from
Ethiopia.
Still, the Islamic Courts Union, as my interlocutor
told me, was holding out a proposal that just might
lead to peace. According to him, the union was
offering to let the government move to Mogadishu
from Baidoa and to let the president bring with him
a force of 1,000 from his home province, Puntland.
I felt this was promising. A peace deal would not
just bring stability — it would reduce the
opportunities for foreign intervention by Ethiopia,
which had thwarted every national and international
effort to bring Somalia’s strife to a peaceful end,
and by the United States, which seemed inclined to
support Christian-run Ethiopia as a bulwark against
the Islamists. (It didn’t help, of course, that the
union’s defense spokesman had used the red-flag word
“jihad” in his firebrand declamations.)
And so I called the office of President Yusuf to
request a meeting. When I received a favorable
response, I called my Islamist interlocutor to let
him know that I would accept the mission. Excited at
the thought of doing more than writing about Somalia
to keep it alive, I bought my ticket and left for
Mogadishu.
When I arrived in Mogadishu in the last week of
August, the city appeared calm. That’s not to say
that there wasn’t a hint of unease. Residents felt
that they were under surveillance. And they were.
Drones hovered above the city all night. War, it
seemed, was in the offing.
My first meeting in town was with Sheik Hassan Dahir
Aweys, then the spiritual head of the Islamic Courts
Union; he struck me as being more reasonable than
many others in the group. In all, I spent three and
a half hours in our first meeting, much of it alone
with him. We were in an office with a huge
escritoire, and we were cramped, sitting very close
to each other, a low table on which he placed his
notebook and I mine and also our teacups between us,
the door left ajar. He leaned forward to enunciate
his words with the slowness of someone used to
speaking to blockheads. (Perhaps he thought me a
halfwit, come from Cape Town, on a dubious peace
mission; a fool proposing that he and President
Yusuf, his adversary, make up for the sake of
Somalia.)
When I told him what prompted my visit, he confessed
he had no recollection of agreeing that President
Yusuf relocate to Mogadishu with a force from
Puntland. The group’s position, he reiterated with
emphasis, was that Ethiopia must withdraw its forces
from Somalia before anything else could happen. He
continued: “We control much of the country and the
people are behind us. What does he control, this
president, confined to Baidoa?”
THIS was not an encouraging beginning.
My subsequent meetings with the Islamists and their
sympathizers were equally frustrating. There was no
discussion of the peace plan that had brought me
back to Somalia. Instead, the discussions centered
on matters they deemed important: whether theaters
should be open; whether girls could be permitted to
wear jeans or go about unveiled; whether tea houses
should play music, or young men watch soccer on
television. There was no serious talk of governance.
What struck me in these conversations was the
presence of Arabic. These men, I surmised, had
received their education in Sudan, Libya or Kuwait.
For the first time since the Middle Ages, Arabic was
the lingua franca in Mogadishu; Somali was
practically a second language.
After my meeting with the Islamists, I headed for
Baidoa to meet the president. When we met in his
office, across the courtyard from his residence — he
emerged dressed in gray, his bearing immaculate,
hair groomed with care and face glowing, after a
good night’s sleep. (How, I asked myself, was this
possible in a town with no modern amenities?)
The president and I sat facing each other, and his
intent stare reminded me that he and Sheik Aweys
come from the same part of the country; I couldn’t
help being mindful that the two of them had engaged
in armed skirmishes in the early ’90s, soon after
the structural collapse of the state. The sheik had
led an Islamist takeover of Puntland; the president,
opposing him, had won that round.

The president accepted my offer to open channels
between the two sides. But it was another message
from him that would ring in my ears: “I know what
war is,” he said. “I have fought in three of them. I
won’t attack Mogadishu, but if the I.C.U. invades
Baidoa, someone will regret it. Tell the sheik this.
From me.”
Back to Mogadishu. I met Sheik Sharif Sheik Ahmed,
the executive director of the union; also present
was the interlocutor who had called me in the first
place. Regrettably, my interlocutor would allude
neither to our initial conversation, nor to his
suggestion that the transitional government move to
Mogadishu, with guarantees. As we spoke, officials
came and went, some bowing low, others kneeling in
deference to the sheik. It was clear that I was in
the presence of a power — a power who was unwilling
to confirm that he had knowledge of my
interlocutor’s offer.
I had to wonder. Was the Islamic union negotiating
in bad faith? Had I embarked on a peace mission that
was doomed to fail? Or did the powers that be in the
Islamic union reject the idea of a rapprochement
with the government and forget to tell me? I chose
to play dumb, and so I provided the sheik’s
secretary with contact information for the
president’s men — as if everything else was on
track.
The following day, I went to meet Sheik Aweys at his
home. I got lost on the way. He lived in a part of
town unfamiliar to me. With no paved roads, and with
the rains having created ravines with crumbly sides,
and with no street names, the entire area was
virtually impassable. My driver and I got stuck in
the sandy chasms.
After I arrived, the sheik and I talked amicably,
with his 2-year-old son sitting on his lap. I dared
not share with him the president’s threatening
remarks.
Before we parted, he commended me for my “audacious”
attempt to bring the Islamic union and the
transitional government closer. He suggested not
giving up hope, however, adding that there was bound
to be further need for my involvement once “the
Somali people” routed their enemies, “and you know
who these are,” he grinned. I offered to return in a
few months.
I didn’t make it back. Over Christmas, Ethiopia,
perhaps intending to provide a gift for the festive
season to its American ally, invaded Mogadishu and
expelled the Islamists. With thousands of Ethiopian
troops in the country — and only a few African Union
troops from elsewhere — savage battles took place in
Mogadishu between the transitional government army
(backed by Ethiopia) and the Islamists, supported by
clan-based militiamen. Hundreds of people were
killed. Now that there has been a lull in the
fighting, it is regrettable that President Yusuf has
both claimed victory and sworn not to engage in
dialogue with the Islamists. I wonder if his refusal
to negotiate from a point of strength will come back
to haunt him.
Somalis are not religious extremists. But Islam has
a revered place in their hearts and minds. The
religion has cultural importance — Arabs opened up
Somalia for their faith and their commerce around
the ninth century; Mogadishu was a cosmopolitan
city, where anyone from the Islamic world felt
welcome.
Islam also has political importance. With the
collapse of the Ottomans, the last Islamic empire,
the Europeans — meeting in Berlin in the late 1800s
— worked out a system by which portions of Somalia
went to Italy, Britain and France. Because Menelik
II, Emperor of Ethiopia, pleaded with his fellow
Christians, claiming that his country was a
Christian island in an Islamic ocean, Ethiopia was,
in time, given a share in the land grab, the
Somali-speaking Ogaden. This territory has remained
the bane of Somalia’s blighted dealings with
Ethiopia.
It could be that Sheik Aweys and his fellow
Islamists are modeling their struggle on the first
Somali to wage an anticolonial war in the name of
Islam against Christian invaders. Maxamed Cabdulle
Xasan fought for the reinstitution of Somalia’s
religious and national dignity. A letter he wrote to
the British government in the early years of the
20th century spells out his aims: “I want to protect
my own religion. All you can get from me is war,
nothing else. We ask for Allah’s blessings. Allah is
with me as I write this. If you want war, I am
ready; if you want peace, go away from my country.”
So what can be done?
For starters, the international community must
provide the wherewithal for the African Union to
deploy 6,000 or so troops to keep the peace —
soldiers who are not from Ethiopia.
But in the end, the only way out of the current
impasse is to resume dialogue between the two
principal parties to the conflict. I now know from
personal experience how difficult this is. President
Yusuf has said that the Islamists’ claim to
represent a religious constituency does not sit well
with his administration.
At the same time, the exiled Islamists are endorsing
or openly engaging in violence. Assassinations of
political figures, exploding roadside bombs in which
peacekeepers or innocent bystanders lose their
lives: these must stop.
Both sides must give. Most Somalis believe that the
Islamists deserve a place at the table; they have
been disempowered through invasion by an occupying
force, which must withdraw, the sooner the better.
Genuine negotiations will not be easy. I found this
out the hard way. But Somalis must consider the
alternative: the violence will continue and the rest
of the world will continue to use land as a
playground for intervention.
Nuruddin Farah is the author, most recently, of
“Knots,” a novel
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