Somalia is the only country
in the world that's frequently described as a
failed state, and one cannot help wondering
why faction leaders/warlords could not reach a
consensus to end the impasse after scores of
aborted peace talks since 1991.
They were aborted simply
because some of the warlords think that they
are more important than others and have the
exclusive right to derail any peace overture
or plan, which in turn subjects the people to
more suffering. As a result the country has
been spinning out of control for so long that
many people at home and abroad gave up hope
for the return of the rule of law.
Can Africa and the rest of
the world community afford the luxury of
seeing Somalia remain in the doldrums forever?
It is difficult to applaud when a war criminal
stands up as a presidential candidate of a
country he had destroyed and in the process
massacred innocent people. I don't mean to be
rude, but would it also be wise to elect a
young man who promoted himself from petrol
station attendant, corporal in the US Marine
Corps, warlord in Somalia and now a jailbird
in a Nairobi overcrowded, urine sticking
jailhouse, where hardcore convicts play havoc
among the prison population?
But the question that bugs
me: is why arrest young Hussein at this
crucial stage when the third and final phase
of the talks was on the table? Since this was
a civil case, borrowing money from a Kenyan
Asian and failing to pay it in time was a
civil case, unless he fleeced the man. I am
not a lawyer, but I believe the criminal court
had no jurisdiction over this case because it
pertains to unpaid debt, which according to
the Law Society of Kenya Handbook is a civil
case that should be settled out of civil
courts. Besides, the young man is a guest of
the Kenya Government, he should have been
given the chance to consult a lawyer.
I would describe it as
miscarriage of justice.
It smells of a conspiracy to
remove the young man from the scene,
Mafia-style, at least temporarily, until a
parliament and a president is elected
following the approval of the charter. I would
describe as miscarriage of justice.
Although a Nairobi judge
released him, there's no guarantee that this
will not happen again. Here is a fatherly, or
better still grandfatherly advice to the young
man: "My dear young man, don't waste the
spring time of your life in a country that has
been in an Intensive Care Unit (ICU) long
before your Dad took up weapons to try and
subdue his arch rival, Ali Mahdi. As the
Americans say 'Get the Hell out of that damn
place" and rejoin the Marine Corps. In
polite English, just part company with those
who thrive on killing their fellow countrymen,
women and children. Never mind even if George
W. Bush sends you to Iraq. At least you will
die as a martyr and the Star & Stripes
would be wrapped around your coffin, or body
bag. In short, as an American citizen with
bright future in the engineering world and to
get a piece of the American pie in the
process, Somalia was a bad choice for you in
the first place, my dear boy".
Now, the key question is:
What had happened to the erstwhile civic
leaders and intellectuals who had initially
fought so hard to snatch the peace talks from
the warlords? Our message to them is: Don't
sit on the fence, fight for the rights of the
long-suffering people. Somalia is your country
and if you do not like to accept your
responsibility for looking after this country,
the bad guys shall claim ownership of it and
declare Somalia to be their property, and then
sell it to the devil. I have said before and I
am saying it again that we must allow the
traditional elders to advise us, even though
they did not have formal school education, but
they have brains-many of them are even better
than some of us who had formal school
education. As our forefathers used to say:
"Growing old is wisdom". They
believed in consensus in clan conflicts in the
tested centuries old traditional Somali Xeer.
Even the colonial administrators had admired
and accepted the outcome of the Somali Xeer
without question.
Over to you , Professor
Gandhi--you and your team in the civic
society.
As if to give clout to a
bunch of warlords, the facilitators of the
Mbagathi talks have been pleading with those
who habitually walk out of the talks for one
flimsy reason or another, throwing compromise
to the dogs. It is sad that a few power hungry
petty politicians and war criminals in the pay
roll of certain stakeholders are frustrating
the interests of a whole nation.
It is an act of extreme
hypocrisy, dishonest and betrayal on the part
of the facilitators to play games with people
who do not have the interest of the Somali
people at heart, because the constitution of a
country is bigger than a gang of anti-peace
individuals and their goons, a. k. a Mooryaans.
*******
THANKS to those who
overwhelmingly voted for my Talking Points.
But there were few people, who in their
comments called me Wanla-weyn. One commentator
went as far as saying: (MM Afrah) "was
Wanla-weyn and he is and will be always (sic).
Another one said: "(he (MM Afrah)
supports Hawiye people only."
Now, I'll skip the Hawiye and other outdated
clan business for another article in the
pipeline, but I have got an issue with the one
who said that I am Wanla-weyn and will always
be a Wanla-weyn
Here I'll try to explain the
meaning of the word Wanla-weyn. Wanle in the
Maay Maay vernacular denotes Milk in the
English language and Caano in standard Somali,
and Weyn means plentiful. In other words, Milk
is Plentiful (in that district). Hence the
name Wanla-weyn.
Wanla-weyn is a fertile
farming and pastoralist district southwest of
Mogadishu with a population of few thousands
hardworking God-fearing non-Waryaa souls. It
was the Northerners (or Somalilanders) who
contemptuously called every Southerner a
Wanla-weyn, no matter which part of the South
he hails from. The reason for this
name-calling started during parliament
election before General Barre came to power in
a military and police coup in October 1969.
The result of the ballots cast in that small
district with only few thousands inhabitants
was staggering. It exceeded several hundred
thousands votes cast for the incumbent
candidate. As always during the successive
civilian regimes vote rigging was the order of
the day, because for one thing there were no
independent observers or monitors in the
country, and as a result many candidates from
the North and Southern underdogs have been
defeated in elections. So the Northerners
coined the name Wanla-weyn.
On the other hand the
Southerners too had a name for anyone from the
North. And that was "Somali Qaldaan".
For some unknown reason the repulsive name
stuck and proliferated all over the South,
like bush fire.
Speaking of ballot boxes, I
thank from the bottom of my heart the
overwhelming majority who supported and
encouraged me to keep the ball rolling and
deliver the message without fear or favour.
Thank you very much. I will try my very best
to expose the antics of the bad guys whether
in the Diaspora or back home. I only hope they
are reading your stimulating comments and the
result of the ballot!