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Mafia syndicates in
the payroll of giant industries under a
notorious godfather and a local warlord are
making millions of dollars by dumping toxic
wastes on our coastal regions and
territorial waters, while United Nations
officials responsible for the protection of
the environment and the international law of
the sea, are dragging their feet. Is this a
cover up, or the proverbial three
monkeys-see no evil, say no evil and hear no
evil? I mean those who never open their
mouth on this grave matter, never lift a
finger against the Mafia syndicates and
their godfathers, even after they knew their
names and nationalities. Not even when they
operate this apocalyptic business openly
under their very nose.
Hey, what the hell is
going on out there?
Toxic wastes are the most
harmful form of pollution. The effect on
humans from contaminated seafood includes
birth defects and premature death. The
result made our sea life synonymous with
environmental disaster, pressing new problem
in chaotic Somalia. Again it baffles me and
some of my colleagues in the media why
action were not taken against these thugs,
even after their names were known, thanks to
the local human rights organizations. It is
no longer secret that some of these
criminals include one of the notorious
warlords who have been bankrolling at the
expense of our environment during the last
decade.
This warlord does not want
to understand that a war to exterminate what
is left of a country once called the Somali
Republic is on the rampage. As he is blinded
by the myopia of making a quick money, he
does not realize or do not want to realize
that the country is facing a war of
extermination worse than the civil/clan
wars-a war that aims the country to
disappear from the face of the earth. This
warlord (the appropriate prefix is The
Vulture) reminds me of the German-Jewish
bankers and industrialists who in the 1930s,
hoping to save themselves, lent Hitler
money, instead of organizing insurgents
against the Nazis with that money to carry
out hit and run operations. Few years later,
these same Jewish bankers and industrialists
ended in Hitler's crematory ovens.
Hiroshima, Pearl Harbour,
the holocaust, the genocide in Rwanda, the
Twin Towers in New York City, the Iraq
quagmire and Darfur would look like a picnic
compared to what is in store for the long
suffering people of Somalia.
Independent investigators
discovered that pollution in the Somali
coast is a major problem that is affecting
the coastal areas and the rest of the
country, too. It affects ocean organisms and
directly affects human health and resources.
Somali fishermen told the investigators that
they are witnessing the toxic wastes in
Somalia's territorial waters are killing the
fish population and many plants in the
ocean, and have huge impact on the health of
the inhabitants. They had witnessed deformed
babies and premature deaths in the coastal
regions, which is fast spreading to the
hinterland-and to the entire country. They
told the investigators that no amount of
sweet talk and diplomacy could save Somalia.
It is not as simple as that, they said.
Meanwhile, the vultures,
as we read some times during the last 3-4
months, have problems of their own. In
sorting out this problem, new signals have
been emerging from Mogadishu. They are
wasting a lot of time over trivialities,
circumventing the crucial problem-that of
disarming their own militia and removing all
road barricades without exception. Now it
emerged that the militia of one of the
warlords refused to disarm and dismantle
their roadblocks from the main arteries of
the capital. Because of these inequities,
donor countries are disinclined to support
the disarmament project as they are doing in
Somaliland and Puntland. It is worth
mentioning here that Osman Atto has taken
the long awaited step to remove his militia
from the Afgoi/Mogadishu road during the
week, but the lingering question is: Would
he stay on course and stick to his guns? I
hope so.
One political analyst was
quoted as saying that some of the warlords
are not serious in the business of disarming
their militia. "We are dealing with the
struggle for power and media hype between
rival gangs," he said. Of course, the
original intention to disarm the militia and
dismantle the string of barricades was
noble, but the great impression created is
an exercise knocked together in ad hoc
manner by certain individual warlords and
their paymasters intent on reinsuring
themselves, never to commit themselves
finally to a single course, but forever
contriving to hedge and lay off. Sixth sense
(that's if you believe in telepathy) would
tell you that whatever they say or do would
turn out to be their typical baloney and
hogwash. It is a world of incurable hate and
mistrust. Simple every day disputes escalate
into bloodshed because of the presence guns.
We in this website have
said before and are saying it again, and
again that the country requires a broad
effort to try to get people to give up their
stash of weapons, so that the gun culture
would not effect next generation, but the
lingering question is: "If they
surrender their cache of weapons who will
guarantee their safety? Many honest citizens
kept their guns close to their hearts for no
other reason than to defend their family
from the marauding Mooryaan. The simple
reason is that they could not afford hiring
private army and that there is no central
government to protect them. It is as simple
as that.
ILLEGAL FISHING
Going back to the toxic
wastes that are being dumped on Somalia's
coastal regions, it is obvious that the
Mafia syndicates and their godfathers have
been taking advantage of the chaotic
situation in Somalia and the cash-starved
warlords. As a result, the country's
territorial waters, the longest in Africa,
became free for all. In addition to toxic
wastes, fishing trawlers from a number of
countries vacuum clean the ocean floors with
impunity, scot-free.
One irony is that whenever
young militias try to apprehend a foreign
trawler for illegally fishing within the
200-miles of Somalia's territorial waters,
the foreign media cook words such as
"pirates of the high seas." A
recent case in point is a Korean cargo ship,
registered in Panama, and was apprehended as
the seamen, mostly Africans, were
discharging dozens of barrels containing
toxic wastes off Adale coast. This is just a
tip of the iceberg from the coastal area,
and there were many more during the last
decade or so. It is estimated that in
Puntland alone, several hundreds factory
trawlers illegally fish off the ocean floors
of Bossaso, Hafun, and Las Qorey as there
has been steady increase in demand for the
red lobsters and other seafood in affluent
societies.
I could go on and on with
this frightening story, but I feel like
being stonewalled by those who were supposed
to take action against those responsible for
these monstrous crimes. For people like me
who have seen and reported too many horror
stories and got used to them at certain
points, this particular one gives me
sleepless nights.
One has the right to ask
this legitimate question: "Where are
the officials from the United Nations
responsible for the protection of the
environment? Are they waiting for manna or
karma to fall from the sky to help them do
their job?
Mr. Kofi Annan, where art
thou, brother?
By M.M. Afrahİ2005
Email: afrah95@hotmail.com
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