February21, 2007:
UN and American counter-terror investigators are trying to uncover
the foreign supporters of the Islamic Courts movement in Somalia. With the
Islamic Courts broken by an Ethiopian invasion last December, investigators are
able to question a lot of people, and they are getting some interesting
answers. Last May, the Islamic Courts militias began moving into the countrys
largest city, Mogadishu. The Islamic Courts were a movement of clans that had
adopted the use of Islamic Courts (groups of clerics and elders who decided
disputes and tried criminals). This was in response to the anarchy that had
overtaken the country since the government (a dictatorship that no one missed)
was overthrown in 1990. The dozens of clans could not agree on forming a new
government, and the country has endured clan and warlord violence ever
since.
The
Islamic Courts movement was also a growing group of clans whose leaders were
willing to give up some of their arbitrary power in order to reduce the chaos
and lawlessness that existed in most of the country. However, before that, most
of northern Somalia had broken away and formed two new states (Puntland and
Sonaliland), via clan coalitions that simply agreed to cooperate, and talk,
rather than fight, to settle disputes. The Islamic Courts, however, attracted a
large number of religious zealots, including some who had been associated with
al Qaeda. Once the Islamic Courts controlled Mogadishu, more foreign Islamic
radicals began to show up. Of special interest to investigators was the role of
nearby Eritrea. By July, Russian made transports were flying weapons into
Mogadishu, via Eritrea. Some of the foreigners who showed up were traced back
to Syria, Libya and Saudi Arabia. There were also weapons shipments from Iran,
and the presence of some Iranians. At the moment, the only government
involvement was from Eritrea, which, of course, denies it all. The people from
other foreign countries were private citizens, but some were working with
organizations (Islamic charities and "cultural" groups) associated with
supporting Islamic radicalism.
What
appears to have happened was that many pro-Islamic radical groups were keeping
an eye on the Islamic Courts, and many of the "foreign volunteers" were
basically there to report back on what shape the Islamic Courts movement was
in. Once Mogadishu was taken, the reports apparently became very positive.
That's because, after June, a lot more money, weapons and people came in to
help the Islamic Courts. The idea, apparently, was that the Islamic Courts were
another Taliban, and Somalia was turning into another Taliban run Afghanistan.
The Islamic Courts leadership proved too unstable to pull this off. Some of the
more radical Islamic Courts stirred up trouble with Ethiopia, which led to the
Ethiopian intervention. There are still Somali clans that favor the Islamic
Courts approach. But for the moment, the secular Transitional Government
movement is on top. But in Somalia, no one stays on top of the pile for long.