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- <text id=91TT0045>
- <title>
- Jan. 14, 1991: Somalia:A Very Private War
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Jan. 14, 1991 Breast Cancer
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 25
- SOMALIA
- A Very Private War
- </hdr><body>
- <p>With the world otherwise occupied, rebel armies seize the
- capital, at least 500 die, and the country sinks into anarchy
- </p>
- <p>By BRUCE W. NELAN--Reported by J.F.O. McAllister/Washington
- and Clive Mutiso/Nairobi
- </p>
- <p> Bodies littered the streets of Mogadishu, and artillery
- blasts rattled its shuttered buildings. Automatic gunfire was
- almost continuous around the presidential palace. Crowded
- hospitals in the capital were without water or food. Foreign
- embassy staffs took cover inside their locked compounds. Ringed
- by tanks and the remnants of his army, Somalia's octogenarian
- President, Mohammed Siad Barre, held out in an underground
- bunker at a military air base south of the city.
- </p>
- <p> Another African state was lurching into anarchy last week.
- The disintegration of order and government in Somalia looked
- like an agonizing replay of the collapse of Liberia last year.
- Almost duplicating the stages that shattered the West African
- state, a group of Somali rebel armies sapped the strength of
- a narrowly based and despotic regime over several years. They
- then closed in on the capital and smashed the government's rule
- without replacing it. If this is the end of Siad Barre, his
- successor has not yet emerged.
- </p>
- <p> Much in the style of Liberia's late President Samuel Doe,
- Siad Barre, a onetime policeman who seized power in a military
- coup in 1969, sealed his own fate by depending more and more
- on his kinsmen and overreacting to any challenge to his
- autocratic rule. Former U.S. diplomat Chester Crocker, a
- professor at Georgetown University, calls Siad Barre an
- "old-style, feudal, tribal chieftain." The country is
- ethnically homogeneous--98.8% are Somalis--so there are no
- significant tribal hatreds. But its 8 million people are split
- into rival clans that have been battling one another for
- centuries.
- </p>
- <p> As Siad Barre grew old and sick, his ability to command
- dwindled, and he turned to his family and his Marehan clan to
- run things. In May 1988 the Somali National Movement, formed
- by the northern Isaq clan, rose in rebellion and seized several
- towns. The army put down the revolt with vicious bombing and
- shelling that killed as many as 50,000 civilians and
- insurgents. Said a relief worker in Mogadishu last week: "This
- regime has cold-bloodedly murdered or starved to death nearly
- 10% of the population, driven another 25% into exile and holds
- a multitude in jail."
- </p>
- <p> The Isaq rebellion did not collapse under the army's attacks
- and soon controlled the countryside in the north. Its success
- was matched by the Ogadeni clan, which launched the Somali
- Patriotic Movement and gradually took over the country's
- southern region. Those rebels were joined six months ago by the
- United Somali Congress, organized by the Hawiye clan, which
- predominates in the center of the country and in Mogadishu. The
- Hawiyes had been outraged in July 1989 when government troops
- opened fire on street demonstrations in the capital and killed
- 450 protesters. Last week the Hawiyes were doing much of the
- shooting in Mogadishu, and at least 500 people were dead.
- </p>
- <p> On Saturday, Italy and the U.S. began evacuating the last
- 500 foreign residents, but neighbors and the world community
- are making little effort to halt the carnage. Only a few years
- ago, it would have been different. Superpower rivalry in the
- Horn of Africa, near the entrance to the Red Sea, was intense;
- both Moscow and Washington had stakes in Siad Barre's rise or
- fall.
- </p>
- <p> The Somali dictator was in fact a client of both superpowers
- at different times. The Soviet Union supported his brand of
- "scientific socialism," then also lent its backing to his
- neighbor, Ethiopia, when it turned Marxist in 1977. Somalia was
- at war with Ethiopia over the disputed Ogaden province, so Siad
- Barre reversed his allegiance and appealed to the U.S.
- Washington was happy to provide him with $100 million in
- military and economic aid annually in the mid-1980s to counter
- Moscow.
- </p>
- <p> Washington did not finally cut off aid until 1989, when Siad
- Barre's massacres of rival clans became too blatant to ignore,
- but the level of its contributions had been sinking steadily.
- Now that the cold war is over, Third World conflicts no longer
- figure as potential victories or losses for the U.S. or the
- Soviet Union, ironically making the world safer for brush-fire
- wars and insurrections.
- </p>
- <p> Somalia's three rebel fronts dismissed Siad Barre's call for
- a cease-fire and negotiations last week, and the United Somali
- Congress marched reinforcements into Mogadishu for what it
- called the "final offensive." In a joint statement issued in
- London, the three groups announced their agreement to form a
- "transitional government that will pave the way for the
- restoration of democratic institutions."
- </p>
- <p> That worthy objective may never be achieved. The rebel
- factions have no political program; the only principle that
- unites them is their hatred of Siad Barre and their
- determination to oust him. Their organizations are completely
- clan-based and are divided by hundreds of years of intramural
- fighting. With no restraining influences from abroad and the
- superpowers attending to other concerns, Somalia's future is
- likely to be sadly similar to its bloody past.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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