| My analysis on Somali Conflict
Video & pictures of Air Rid Made by the US Blackhawk against Aided |
![]() |
On July 1, 1960, by agreement with the UN Trusteeship Council, Somalia was granted independence. It merged thereupon with the former British protectorate, to which the United Kingdom, by prearrangement, had given independence on June 26. The first president, Aden Abdullah Osman Daar, elected in 1960, was defeated for reelection in 1967 by the former premier Abdi Rashid Ali Shirmarke. On October 15, 1969, Shirmarke was assassinated, and days later a military group, led by Major General Muhammad Siad Barre, seized power. In 1970 Barre declared Somalia a socialist state, and in the following years most of the modern economy of the country was nationalized. A drought in 1974 and 1975 caused widespread starvation.
In mid-1977 ethnic Somalis in the adjacent Ogadçn region of Ethiopia
initiated open warfare aimed at ending Ethiopian control of the area. The
rebels were armed by Somalia, which also contributed troops to the effort.
The Somalis captured most of the Ogadçn by late 1977, but Ethiopia,
aided by Cuba and the USSR, reasserted control over the region in early
1978, as Somalia's army suffered heavy losses. Subsequent fighting in the
Ogadçn precipitated a flood of refugees into Somalia; the number
of homeless in 1981 was estimated at close to 2 million. The United States
gave both humanitarian and military aid and was in return granted use of
the naval facilities at Berbera, previously a Soviet base.
Opposition
to Barre's rule began to coalesce in 1981 after Barre chose members of
his own Marehan clan for government positions while excluding members of
the Mijertyn and Isaq clans. Insurgent groups from those clans initiated
clashes with government troops beginning in 1982. A peace accord ended
hostilities with Ethiopia in 1988, but the civil war intensified, despite
Barre's attempts to placate insurgents by proposing a multiparty government.
By 1989 only Mogadishu and portions of Hargeysa and Berbera were firmly
in government control. In 1990 the clans opposing Barre formed a united
front to fight the war. Barre was forced to flee the capital in January
1991, and was eventually accepted for asylum in Lagos, Nigeria, where he
died of a heart attack in 1995.
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
| The Fundamental Law of Lineage Segmentation* | |
|---|---|
| My | Against |
| Uterine brother and I | My half-brother, |
| Brother and I | My father, |
| Father's household | My uncle's household, |
| Uncle's household and my household | the rest of the immediate kin, |
| Immediate kin | none-immediate members of the clan, |
| Clan | other clans and finally, |
| Nation and I | the world! |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|