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The Voice Of
The Voiceless
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Somalia:
Hidden Catastrophe, Hidden Agenda |
by
Media Lens, UK
Wednesday, May 21, 2008
 Since 1996 the US has engaged
in a continual "low-intensity" war in
Somalia that has killed a million of that
country's inhabitants, a death toll second
only to the Congo during that time. Another
million Somalis are homeless, refugees from
the fighting. In the US, news of happenings
in Somalia is scarce and often misleading.
It's worth noting that Somalia sits upon an
untapped lake of oil, and has significant
uranium deposits as well, making it in the
US interest to prevent any viable national
government not under its control from coming
to power.
Somalia: Hidden Catastrophe, Hidden Agenda
by Media Lens
On May 1, the BBC website reported an attack
on Somalia with the words: “Air raid kills
Somali militants.”
One might think the BBC’s headline would
identify the agency responsible for the
bombing, but the first few sentences also
shed no light:
“The leader of the military wing of an
Islamist insurgent organization in
Somalia has been killed in an overnight
air strike.
“Aden Hashi Ayro, al-Shabab’s military
commander, died when his home in the
central town of Dusamareb was bombed.
“Ten other people, including a senior
militant, are also reported dead.”
Only in the fourth sentence, was
responsibility ascribed:
“A US military spokesman told the BBC
that it had attacked what he called a
known al-Qaeda target in Somalia.”
English teachers often illustrate use of the
passive form with the sentence: ‘A man has
been arrested.’ The passive is preferable,
students are told, because the active form,
‘The police have arrested a man,’ contains a
redundancy — the agent is already indicated
by the action. There’s no need to actually
mention ‘the police.’
Likewise, the BBC takes for granted that the
US is the world’s policeman; no need to
mention it by name. The action of bombing an
impoverished Third World country already
indicates the agent. This also helps explain
why no mention was made of the illegality of
this act of aggression.
On the rare occasions when the media mention
the conflict in Somalia at all, the focus
tends to fall on US attempts to hunt down al
Qaeda, or on the West’s alleged humanitarian
motives. Other priorities were indicated in
1992 when the US political weekly The Nation
referred to Somalia as “one of the most
strategically sensitive spots in the world
today: astride the Horn of Africa, where
oil, Islamic fundamentalism and Israeli,
Iranian and Arab ambitions and arms are apt
to crash and collide.” (December 21, 1992)
In December 2006, the US backed the invasion
of Somalia by its close Ethiopian ally to
overthrow the Islamist government, the
Islamic Courts Union (ICU). Christian
Ethiopia is a historic enemy of Somalia,
which is made up entirely of Sunni Muslims.
On December 4 of that year, General John
Abizaid, the commander of US forces from the
Middle East through Afghanistan, travelled
to Addis Ababa to meet the Ethiopian prime
minister, Meles Zenawi. Three weeks later,
Ethiopian forces crossed into
Somalia and Washington launched a series of
supportive air strikes. The Guardian quoted
a former intelligence officer familiar with
the region:
“The meeting was just the final handshake.”
(Xan Rice and Suzanne Goldenberg, “The
American connection: How US forged an
alliance with Ethiopia over invasion,” The
Guardian, January 13, 2007)
Political analyst James Petras commented:
“Somalia . . . was invaded by
mercenaries by Ethiopia, trained,
financed, armed and directed by US
military advisers.” (Petras, ‘The
Imperial System: Hierarchy, Networks and
Clients: The Case of Somalia,’ Dissident
Voice, February 18, 2007)
USA Today reported in January 2007 that the
US had “quietly poured weapons and military
advisers into Ethiopia,” which had received
nearly $20 million in US military aid since
late 2002. The report added:
“The [Somalia] intervention is
controversial in Ethiopia, where the
Meles government has become increasingly
repressive, said Chris Albin-Lackey, an
African researcher at Human Rights
Watch.
“The Meles government has limited the
power of the opposition in parliament
and arrested thousands. A government
inquiry concluded that security forces
fatally shot, beat or strangled 193
people who protested election fraud in
2005.”
Petras noted that, having driven the
last of the warlords from Mogadishu and
most of the countryside, the ICU had
established a government which was
welcomed by the great majority of
Somalis and covered over 90% of the
population:
“The ICU was a relatively honest
administration, which ended warlord
corruption and extortion. Personal
safety and property were protected,
ending arbitrary seizures and
kidnappings by warlords and their armed
thugs. The ICU is a broad multi-tendency
movement that includes moderates and
radical Islamists, civilian politicians
and armed fighters, liberals and
populists, electoralists and
authoritarians. Most important, the
Courts succeeded in unifying the country
and creating some semblance of
nationhood, overcoming clan
fragmentation.” (Petras, op. cit)
Martin Fletcher wrote in the Times of the
ICU:
“I am no apologist for the courts. Their
leadership included extremists with
dangerous intentions and connections.
But for six months they achieved the
near-impossible feat of restoring order
to a country that appeared ungovernable…
“The courts were less repressive than
our Saudi Arabian friends. They publicly
executed two murderers (a fraction of
the 24 executions in Texas last year),
and discouraged Western dancing, music
and films, but at least people could
walk the streets without being robbed or
killed. That trumps most other
considerations. Ask any Iraqi.
“The Islamists have now been replaced -
with Washington’s connivance - by a
weak, fragile Government that was
created long before the courts won
power, that includes the very warlords
they defeated and relies for survival on
Somalia’s worst enemy.” (Fletcher, ‘The
Islamists were the one hope for
Somalia,’ The Times, January 8, 2007)
It was clear to many commentators that the
Ethiopian invasion would prove disastrous.
Three months later, the Daily Telegraph
reported:
“A new humanitarian crisis is rapidly
taking shape in the Horn of Africa where
eight days of heavy fighting in
Mogadishu, the capital of Somalia, has
forced about 350,000 people to flee.
“Artillery fire has devastated large
areas of the city, forcing about one
third of its population to leave.
Yesterday Mogadishu’s main hospital was
shelled.
“The plains around Mogadishu are filled
with refugees enduring desperate
conditions with little food or shelter.
The fighting began when Somalia’s
internationally recognised government,
supported by Ethiopian troops, launched
an offensive against insurgents.” (Mike
Pflanz, ‘Fighting brings fresh misery to
Somalia,’ Telegraph, April 26, 2007)
The Telegraph cited a British aid
worker: “They are bombing anything that
moves.”
Catherine Weibel, from the United Nations
High Commission for Refugees was also
quoted:
“Everyone we are talking to says this is
the worst situation they have seen in 16
years since the last government fell.”
The War On
Terror . . . And The Real Concern
The preferred media framework for making
sense of US actions closely parallels cold
war mythology. We are to believe the US is
passionately, even blindly, battling
ideological enemies in an effort to protect
itself and the West. Guardian columnist
Jonathan Freedland could be relied upon to
paint this picture of events:
“A fortnight ago the Ethiopians entered
Somalia to topple the Islamist forces
who had just taken Mogadishu. Americans
dislike that Islamist movement, fearing
it has the makings of an African
Taliban, so they backed the Ethiopians
to take it out. According to Patrick
Smith, the editor of Africa
Confidential, the war on terror is fast
becoming a cold war for the 21st
century, with the US finding proxy
allies to fight proxy enemies in faraway
places.” (Freedland, “Like a deluded
compulsive gambler, Bush is fuelling a
new cold war,” The Guardian, January 10,
2007)
If this sounds curiously simplistic, even
childish, it is. In fact, the cold war, like
the “war on terror”, was far less
ideological, far more prosaic, than
journalists like Freedland claim. Historian
Howard Zinn has, for example, commented on
the Vietnam war, which the BBC would have us
believe “was America’s attempt to stop
Communists from toppling one country after
another in South East Asia”:
“When I read the hundreds of pages of
the Pentagon Papers entrusted to me by
[military analyst] Daniel Ellsberg, what
jumped out at me were the secret memos
from the National Security Council.
Explaining the U.S. interest in
Southeast Asia, they spoke bluntly of
the country’s motives as a quest for
‘tin, rubber, oil.’”
Ethiopia’s invasion coincided with the
Pentagon’s goal of creating a new
‘Africa Command’ to deal with what the
Christian Science Monitor described as:
“Strife, oil, and Al Qaeda.” Richard
Whittle wrote:
“The creation of the new command will be
more than an exercise in shuffling
bureaucratic boxes, experts say. The US
government’s motives include countering
Al Qaeda’s known presence in Africa,
safeguarding future oil supplies, and
competing with China, which has been
courting African governments in its own
quest for petroleum, they suggest.”
(Richard Whittle, ‘Pentagon to train a
sharper eye on Africa,’ January 5, 2007)
As Andy Rowell and James Marriott have
noted, the key fact is that “some 30 per
cent of America’s oil will come from Africa
in the next ten years”. (Rowell and
Marriott, A Game as Old as Empire — The
Secret World of Economic Hit Men and the Web
of Global Corruption, edited by Steven
Hiatt, Berrett-Koehler, 2007, p.118)
The US has plans for nearly two-thirds of
Somalia’s oil fields to be allocated to the
US oil companies Conoco, Amoco, Chevron and
Phillips. The US hopes Somalia will line up
as an ally alongside Ethiopia and Djibouti,
where the US has a military base. This
alliance would give America powerful
leverage close to the major energy-producing
regions.
Chatham House, a British think tank of the
independent Royal Institute of International
Affairs, commented on US and Ethiopian
intervention last year:
“In an uncomfortably familiar pattern,
genuine multilateral concern to support
the reconstruction and rehabilitation of
Somalia has been hijacked by unilateral
actions of other international actors —
especially Ethiopia and the United
States — following their own foreign
policy agendas.”
Catastrophic Crisis
This ‘hijacking’ has had truly appalling
consequences. More than one million people
have been made internal refugees, and the UN
food security unit warned last week that 3.5
million people, half of Somalia’s
population, are facing famine. Fighting has
turned Mogadishu into a ghost town. About
700,000 people have fled — out of a
population of up to 1.5 million. The
International Committee of the Red Cross
describes Somalia’s crisis as
“catastrophic.”
Soaring food prices have driven thousands of
protestors onto the streets of the capital,
Mogadishu. On May 5, Professor Abdi Samatar,
a professor of geography and global studies
at the University of Minnesota, told the US
radio program Democracy Now:
“Well, what you see in Mogadishu over
the last year and a half or so, since
the Ethiopian invasion, which was
sanctioned by the US government, has
destroyed virtually all the
life-sustaining economic systems which
the population have built without the
government for the last fifteen, sixteen
years.”
A kilo of rice, which previously sold at
around seventy US cents, now costs as much
as $2.50. The average day’s income for
anyone fortunate enough to have a job is
less than a dollar a day. The gap between
incomes and the cost of food primarily
imported from overseas means that millions
of people cannot afford to eat.
Last week, Amnesty International reported
that it had obtained scores of accounts of
killings by Ethiopian troops that Somalis
have described as “slaughtering [Somalis]
like goats.” In one case, “a young child’s
throat was slit by Ethiopian soldiers in
front of the child’s mother.”
Amnesty reported that during sweeps through
neighborhoods, Ethiopian forces placed
snipers on roofs, and civilians were unable
to move about for fear of being shot:
“While some sniper fire appeared to be
directed at suspected members of anti-TFG
[Transitional Federal Government] armed
groups, reports indicate that civilians
were also frequently caught in
indiscriminate fire. In many cases
families were forced to carry their
wounded to medical care in wheelbarrows
and on donkeys because ambulance drivers
would not operate their vehicles due to
general insecurity, including sniper
fire. As a result, it has become very
difficult for civilians to access
medical care.”
The British government has consistently
downplayed both the gravity of the crisis
and the murderous behavior of Ethiopian
forces. In the Foreign Office’s latest
annual human rights assessment of Somalia
there was no mention of Ethiopia, let alone
the conduct of its troops. No surprise —
Ethiopia is one of the largest recipients of
UK aid in Africa and, as discussed, is an
important regional ally.
The Media
Follow, The Government Leads
Predictably, the government’s strategic
silence is reflected in press reporting. In
the last year, the words ‘Somalia’ and
‘famine’ have appeared in a grand total of
seven British broadsheet newspaper articles
discussing the topic. Of the few references
to the latest US attack in the British press
over the last week, only the Independent and
the Sunday Times made briefs references to
Somalia’s humanitarian crisis. The
Independent noted that life for Somalia’s
nine million residents has become
“unbearable”. The Guardian merely quoted
Reuters:
“Western security services have long
seen Somalia as a haven for militants.
Warlords overthrew dictator Siad Barre
in 1991, casting the country into
chaos.” (Reuters, “US airstrike kills
head of al-Qaida in Somalia,” Guardian
International, May 2, 2008)
The Amnesty report was mentioned in three
broadsheet newspapers. Of these, The
Guardian failed to mention the US role at
all. Ian Black commented:
“Ethiopia sent in troops in December
2006 and ejected them. Since then,
Mogadishu has been caught up in a
guerrilla war between the government and
its Ethiopian allies and the Islamist
insurgents. Up to 1 million Somalians
are internally displaced.” (Ian Black,
‘Somali refugees speak of horrific war
crimes,’ The Guardian, May 7, 2008)
By contrast, a short Independent piece led
with the US role:
“Amnesty International has called for
the role of the United States in Somalia
to be investigated, following
publication of a report accusing its
allies of committing war crimes.”
Amnesty’s Dave Copeman was cited:
“  There are major countries that
have significant influence. The US, EU
and European countries need to exert
that influence to stop these attacks.”
This is the sole reference to Copeman’s
comments in the entire national UK press.
Professor Samatar commented on the latest US
attack:
“[I]t’s quite befuddling to Somalis and
many other peace-loving people around
the world as to why the United States
has chosen to bomb people who are
desperate for assistance and food, and
who have been dislocated and traumatized
by an Ethiopian invasion, a country that
has its own people under tyranny in
itself.”
The Truth of “Our Leaders”
With our shared responsibility for the
catastrophe in Somalia buried out of sight,
the Telegraph reported this week:
“Gordon Brown urged the Burmese
authorities to give ‘unfettered access’
to humanitarian agencies. ‘We now
estimate that two million people face
famine or disease as a result of the
lack of co-operation of the Burmese
authorities. This is completely
unacceptable,’ he said.” (Alan Brown,
‘Burmese officials “are seizing
emergency aid and selling it for
profit”,’ Daily Telegraph, May 13, 2008)
The great lie is that we are represented by
people like Gordon Brown, described as “our
leaders.” Because they represent us and we
are not monsters, we are to believe that
“our leaders” are seeking to resolve
problems afflicting humanity in general,
while working more specifically to protect
us from terrorism and other threats. In
other words, we are to believe that ‘our
leaders’, like us, are rational,
compassionate and well-intentioned.
The truth is very different. In fact we are
free to chose from parties and leaders who
all represent the same interests of
concentrated state-corporate power — the
tiny fraction of the population that owns
much of the country and runs its business.
Crucially, “our leaders” front a political
system that has an overwhelming advantage in
high-tech military power. They are all too
willing to use this power to convulse
countries with bloodshed when doing so
supports their lucrative version of economic
“order”. Iraq is the obvious example —
Somalia is another.
“Our leaders” rule in the name of democracy,
but they act in the interests of a narrow,
extremely violent kleptocracy.
Media Lens
is a UK-based media watchdog group headed by
David Edwards and David Cromwell. The first
Media Lens book is Guardians of Power: The
Myth Of The Liberal Media (Pluto Books,
London, 2006). Read other articles by Media,
or visit Media's website.
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