| Jan-Mar 09 | Apr-Jun 09 | Jul-Sept 09 | Oct-Dec 09 | Jan-May 10 | Jun-Dec 10 | Jan-May 11 | Jun-Dec 11 | Jan-May 12 |

[Dehai-WN] News24.com: Kenya - big trouble in little Mogadishu

From: Berhane Habtemariam <Berhane.Habtemariam_at_gmx.de_at_dehai.org>
Date: Thu, 13 Dec 2012 00:51:40 +0100

Kenya - big trouble in little Mogadishu


2012-12-12 17:04

Nairobi - Bustling with business, the Kenyan capital's Eastleigh district is
dubbed "little Mogadishu" after the anarchic capital of Somalia, where so
many here fled from for a new, more peaceful life.

But the largely ethnic Somali and vibrant economic hub faces tough times
after a string of attacks blamed on Islamist militants, with the community
battered by a harsh police crackdown to root out a hard core of insurgents.

"Ethnic Somalis, irrespective of which passport they carry, have become a
target for armed thugs across Kenya," said Abdi Aynte, an independent
analyst, and himself a Somali who spends much time in Kenya.

Kenya has suffered a series of attacks - including grenade and bomb
explosions - regularly pinned on members or sympathisers of Somalia's
al-Qaeda-linked Shabaab.

But heavy handed crackdowns risk alienating both ethnic Somali Kenyans and
refugees, many of whom fled war-torn Somalia to escape the extremist rule of
the same militants they are now viewed as potential backers of.

"The people of Eastleigh are first attacked by bombs, and then mistreated by
security forces, who round up people and arrest them indiscriminately," said
businessman Mohamed Hirsi, who imports perfume.

On dusty, bumpy streets hemmed in by high rise buildings, crowds haggle at
street markets selling fried spicy snacks, heaps of bananas and piles of
melons, with traders from across East Africa coming to Eastleigh to strike
deals.

Last week two separate attacks - a roadside bomb and a grenade hurled into a
mosque - killed six, while last month a bomb on a bus that killed nine
people sparked violent anti-Somali demonstrations.

Kenya hosts over 516 000 Somali refugees, the vast majority in the world's
largest refugee camp complex of Dadaab in the remote northeast.

Ethnic Somalis

But more than 2.3 million Kenyans are ethnic Somalis, some six percent of
the population. Their traditional homelands make up around a fifth of the
country.

They also form a key part of the economy, with the estimated 500 000 people
working in Eastleigh paying over $23m in taxes a month, according to
official figures, and acting as the hub for much of the commerce from
Somalia.

Kenya invaded Somalia last year to attack Shabaab bases, prompting dire
warnings of revenge. But while a wider military offensive has put the
Shabaab in Somalia on the back foot, the community here are viewed with
suspicion.

"Fear, guilt by association and a sense of 'otherness' have now enveloped
the millions of Somalis living in the country, all of which is good news for
al-Shabaab," Aynte added.

Such issues are not contained to Eastleigh alone. Kenya's northeastern
Somali regions have also seen a wave of attacks against security forces,
prompting crackdowns and reprisal raids, according to Human Rights Watch.

Kenyan officials have spoken openly about wanting to return Somali refugees
back to their homeland.

"It is terrible... we left Somalia because of insecurity there, but now we
face the same problems here in Kenya," said one Somali refugee running a
small business in Eastleigh, who asked not to be named.

After recent attacks, police have launched mass arrests of those without
proper papers.

"I had to pay to get my son released, he had no involvement in any attack
but they arrested him," the refugee added.

Some have fled Eastleigh back to refugee camps near the Somali border, such
as Halima Juma, whose husband was beaten by angry crowds in Nairobi.

Somali community

"All our belongings were stolen, we are in a desperate situation" she said,
now back living in the Dadaab camp.

No group have claimed responsibility for the attacks, while Shabaab
spokesperson Abdiaziz Abu Musab has condemned the killings, telling AFP they
are "the acts of non-Muslims."

Alienating the Kenya's Somali community brings with it multiple risks.

Tensions are already high across the country ahead of elections due in
March, five years after deadly post-poll killings that shattered Kenya's
image as a beacon of regional stability.

"Al-Shabaab has in the past exploited the Somali people when they have felt
most victimised," Aynte added. "Already, the Shabaab's effective propaganda
machine is hard at work, trying to turn a largely unsuspecting community
into a hostile unit."

As elections approach, an angry Kenyan Somali population will be one more
area of concern, adding to separate issues including a separatist movement
on the coast, militant Islamists and tensions between ethnic groups.

"Kenya looks even more divided and susceptible to outbreaks of violence than
it did in 2007," David Throup wrote in a recent report for the US-based
Centre for Strategic and International Studies.

 




      ------------[ Sent via the dehai-wn mailing list by dehai.org]--------------
Received on Wed Dec 12 2012 - 23:11:14 EST
Dehai Admin
© Copyright DEHAI-Eritrea OnLine, 1993-2012
All rights reserved