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http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/27/world ... &ref=world
As Rumors Swirl, Somalia Seems Set for Full-Scale War
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By JEFFREY GETTLEMAN
Published: July 27, 2006
BAIDOA, SOMALIA, July 27 — In the past few days, phantom troops have reportedly flooded across the border from Ethiopia. Mysterious planes have landed in Mogadishu. Young gunmen in a kaleidoscope of camouflage are cruising the streets all over this country, their true allegiance one big question mark.
But in this land of secrets, one thing is clear: the two powers to reckon with in Somalia — the Islamic clerics who rule Mogadishu and the internationally-recognized transitional government confined to Baidoa — are headed on a collision course toward a full-scale war. And this time the crisis may spill far beyond Somalia’s borders.
Ethiopia and Eritrea, bitter enemies, are apparently already arming the two different sides and threatening to ignite ethnic and religious tensions across the Horn of Africa. Many people fear that if a major war breaks out in Somalia, Muslim tribes in EthiopiaÂ’s deserts will rise up and challenge the Christian leadership; Islamists in Mogadishu will storm down the coast toward Kenya; Ethiopia and Eritrea will resume their costly battles; and countries like Sudan and Egypt, which have weighed in before, will weigh in again.
In anticipation of all this, SomaliaÂ’s transitional leaders are urging the United Nations to lift an arms embargo. They want more weapons to flow into a place already a free-for-all for armed groups, where an entire generation of young men has grown up with guns in their hands, not pencils.
Islamists in Mogadishu are calling for a holy war as they sweep across a victimized landscape desperate for order, gobbling up territory, absorbing militias and ultimately headed, many people fear, for Baidoa, the midsized town 150 miles away where the fledging transitional government is trying to take root.
The Baidoa government is rushing to fortify its buildings and unify its militias into a national army. But its leaders admit they are outgunned. And a little paranoid. And divided.
The Parliament meets in an old grain warehouse where politicians from different clans struggle to find consensus even with a common enemy, the Islamists, breathing down their necks.
In downtown Baidoa, donkeys snack on piles of garbage, children chant the Koran in bullet-pocked rooms that pass for schools and many peopleÂ’s foreheads wrinkle up when they asked about their future.
The tensions spiked last week when hundreds of Ethiopian troops allegedly rushed into Baidoa to protect the transitional government. On Wednesday, a mysterious cargo jet landed in Mogadishu, and today there were reports of two more. The Baidoa government immediately accused Eritrea of shipping weapons to the Islamists, which the Eritrean government promptly denied.
United Nations diplomats are shuttling between Baidoa and Mogadishu, urging both sides to negotiate. Meanwhile, United Nations agencies are preparing for massive displacements of people that could result from a major conflict. The Baidoa government will return next week to the Sudan for another round of peace talks with the Islamists, hoping to strike an accord with moderate clerics but fearing it is the hardliners who hold the real power.
“It’s not our policy to fight,” said Ali Mohamed Gedi, the transitional government’s prime minister. “But the Islamists are expanding their muscles. It’s a very fragile time.”
In Mogadishu, the ruined capital, residents are stockpiling batteries, bottled water and other staples. At a rally this past week, thousands packed into a soccer stadium and chanted, “Death to Ethiopia.”
ItÂ’s a tale of two cities with no poetic ending in sight. Many people fear war in inevitable. The Islamic Courts Union, a grassroots uprising centered on strict Muslim law, is bent on creating an Islamic state, incompatible with the type of secular government the Baidoa politicians are trying to form. American officials claim some of the Islamist leaders are connected to Al Qaeda, and Washington tried to undermine the Islamists by supporting their warlord rivals, which only backfired.
The Islamists now control SomaliaÂ’s biggest city and have access to the countryÂ’s best ports and airfields and apparently a pipeline of weapons. But the Islamists canÂ’t dismiss the Baidoa government, because it is recognized by western powers and backed up by Ethiopian muscle.
“Each side has a dream to get rid of the other,” explained Omar Faruk, a Somali journalist. “They’ll never share power.”
The truth about Somalia is that despite all the surface tensions between secularists and Islamists, it is clan allegiances that truly divide society. ItÂ’s been that way for centuries since clan-based tribes roamed the deserts and competed for grazing land. One reason why the Baidoa government is weak is because it was organized as a compromise between clans and is therefore riven by rivalries and mistrust. The political culture in Somalia has yet to catch up with the good intentions of the international experts who are trying to facilitate peace.


