[dehai-news] Africanarguments.org: Endgame for Aweys; but Al-Shabaab will continue

From: Berhane Habtemariam <Berhane.Habtemariam_at_gmx.de_at_dehai.org>
Date: Sat, 29 Jun 2013 12:44:21 +0200

Endgame for Aweys; but Al-Shabaab will continue

- By Abdihakim Ainte

June 29, 2013

Hasan Dahir Aweys' capture may help the Somali government talk to other more
moderate Islamist leaders.

Finally, the fate of Hassan Dahir Aweys - Somalia's foremost Islamist - has
been determined. While details of the operation that led to his apprehension
are unclear, he appears to have voluntarily surrendered to the Ximan & Xeeb
administration - a tiny district in central Somalia from which he hails.

This should surprise no one who has been paying attention to Aweys'
declining fortunes. He had long been waging a fierce battle with Al-Shabaab
and became the dark horse within the hardliners (who distrusted his national
ambition). Fortunately for Aweys, his primarily nationalist ideology kept
him off of the US's most wanted list.

As most counterterrorism experts have been quick to point out, his capture
does not spell the end for Al-Shabaab or terrorist activity in Somalia.
Quite the contrary, it may encourage hardliners to stage more deadly
assaults in order to counter the view that Al-Shabaab is on the back foot.

Aweys regularly showed dissatisfaction with Al-Shabaab's intolerant ideology
and unflinching militancy. He openly condemned, for instance, the
assassination of Omar Hashi, who was then the Minister of Defense within the
Transitional Federal Government.

For more than three decades, Aweys defined Somalia's narrative of political
Islam, earning him both friends and foes within the Islamic movements. He
was among the founders of AIAI (Ittahad al-Islamiyyah) - arguably the
country's largest ever armed militant Islamist group. For years, he used the
spectre of the AIAI to drum up political and financial support, mainly from
the Gulf States, to pursue his own political ambitions. In doing so, he
argued that Islam is the only answer for Somalia and can be the only uniting
factor against tribalism and factionalism.

Before he merged with Al-Shabaab, Aweys was a polarizing figure in the
Islamist movement hell-bent on becoming its supreme leader - a title he held
during the reign of the Islamic Courts Union (ICU) in 2006. That dream was,
however, dashed when he joined Al-Shabaab and became a marginal figure.
Since then his popularity has faded further and he has become unable to
appeal to the broader political Islamic movement in Somalia.

What's next?

To the hardliners, Aweys' surrender represents an act of defection and, more
crucially, a victory for their global Jihadist agenda - an agenda that Aweys
long opposed.

If Aweys has struck a truce with the Somali government, as it seems, then
Al-Shabaab will issue a Fatwa calling for his death as an apostate. To
counter the likely Fatwa, Aweys will return to preaching sermons to debase
hardliners and their sabotage of Islam.

In the best-case scenario, Aweys' capture may also make it easier for the
government to engage with other key moderate defectors like Mukhtar Robow -
this is likely to be useful for any future negotiation between Al-Shabaab
and the government.

Either way, the government should not be lulled into thinking that Aweys'
capture will end the conflict in Somalia. But the news probably came as a
relief to the government which has of late been plagued by a wave of lethal
suicide attacks against its precarious security apparatus.

Of course, Aweys' capture has symbolic significance in the wider war against
the rise of Islamism in Somalia and in this respect was overdue. However, it
will not prove a decisive event in the war against Al-Shabaab.

Abdihakim Ainte is a Somali analyst and commentator. You can tweet him
_at_Abdikhakim

 
Received on Sat Jun 29 2013 - 22:05:34 EDT

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