An old friend,
with whom I started exchanging the previous
night's dream about the gloomy situation in
Somalia, came up with a jewel of a dream the
other day. He said he wake up in the middle of
the night screaming "Goodbye forever
tribal war, cause of our ruin!" But my
own dream is not necessarily bad or good.
Still it has a dark side-a stormy scenario. It
says that Somalia would soon have another
dictator reminiscent to General Barre's
heydays. Then my friend looked at me in
disgust and said: "That's very bad
dream."
"Well, we're not there yet," I said.
"But the probability of electing one of
the warlords are bringing us one step closer.
This says a lot of the ongoing third and final
phase of talks in Mbagathi," I envisaged
"Another
dictator! Over my dead body," my dream
partner muttered under his breath and stormed
out of my apartment-cum-office and swore never
to exchange dreams with me again.
This brings me
back to Abdirizak Haji Hussein, former prime
minister in the civilian regimes of the 1960s,
who said at one of the earlier aborted peace
talks in Addis Ababa: "A bad government
is better than no government." Of course
I am not for a bad government or another
warlord/military dictator. But any
presidential candidate, dictator or no
dictator needs to resolve internal intrigues
and senseless squabbles before he wins the
trust and confidence of the Somali people. He
has to get it out of the system that's
stinking, including corruption, nepotism, clan
adoration, rumour mongering, political brokers
(popularly known as Afminsharism) and a nation
for sale mentality, so something new can come
in.
More important,
he, as the servant of the people, must see to
it that Somalia should rejoin the family of
nations, because if there are people in this
world who deserve peace and stability it is
the haunted people of Somalia. The catch
phrase is: peoples' welfare first and choice
to the many and not just for the few. A
president should make good connection with the
people and deliver what he had promised to
them in his platform, and less on arcane
disputes with the opposition. Simply put, the
new president-elect should not emulate the
heartless thugs who are simmering their own
greed, but man of the people, the downtrodden
masses. He must be at his best when the
pressure is on, articulate, resourceful and
relentless. And of course with clean track
record in past performances.
The new
president should accept constructive criticism
and avoid detaining his opponents on flimsy
charges.
Yes, it is too
ambitious, and the risks are high, but the
country badly needs such person to stitch it
together Here I completely disagree with
Abdirizak Haji Hussein's theory that a bad
government is better than no government. No,
Abdirizak, we will never swap a bad government
with those thugs who massacred our people and
ruined our country. Just dump them all. We
want people with talent, vigor, and charisma;
free from clan ties, and of course no disciple
of the late military despot.
| Nostalgia
is one of the most powerful of all
political forces, and we often
underestimate its ability to distort
truth and mock reality. A recent
survey by an independent local NGO,
for instance, showed 60 per cent of
Somalis in the South would vote for
Mohamed Siad Barre, if he were alive
and running for President today. |
|
After
experiencing the bloody instability in the
country during the last 13 years, many people
who celebrated his downfall now actually miss
him. However, the same survey in Somaliland
came up with 0% even though they're fully
conscious that their current leaders are
disciples of Siyad Barre who carried his
orders to the letter.
"The Somali people in the South became
ungovernable. They need a benign father-figure
dictator," a 50-year-old woman, who had
witnessed her city, first destroyed by General
Barre's multiple rocket launchers and mortars
under the command of general Morgan and was
later finished by the warlords, told the
surveyors, making the Mediterranean-style city
of two million inhabitants look like Nagasaki
and Hiroshima after the pilot of Enola Gay
dropped his first atomic bomb on the twin
Japanese cities.
Somalis looked
back on a long-past age of glory, of Somalis
having spent long as the satrapy of British,
French, and Italian colonial administrations,
followed by corrupt civilian regimes, but
Major General Mohamed Siyad Barre crossed
these colonials and corrupt civilian regimes
to find his precursors Mohamed Abdulle Hassan
and Ahmed Gurey, whose glories he meant to
relive and restore.
How do
Dictators win the admiration of their people?
Dictators always promise that they alone can
deliver stability, and like to pose for the
cameras, cuddling babies to get that message
across.
During his
tenure, it is the promise of stability that
led people to embrace him, often overlooking
terror, atrocity and the cult of personality.
Later, after he is gone, he is missed for the
same reason: for the stability he had
introduced with the help of a host of dreaded
security agencies, and his crack Red Beret
bodyguards.
One of his lasting legacies was the
introduction of the first Somali script in
Latin; despite behind the scene-heated
opposition by religious zealots who wanted
that Somalia as a Muslim country should adopt
Arabic as the official language. After stern
warning, no more single word was heard from
them. They knew that to confront him was
tantamount to committing suicide. Many of us
still recall Ololihii Far-barashada, the
nation-wide relentless campaign to introduce
the new script to the nomads and farmers.
*******
XAWAALA
UNDER SIEGE AGAIN!
After a hiatus
the Somali remittance companies are under
siege again, accusing them of money laundering
and devious links with terrorist organizations
in the Middle East and in different other
places. One newspaper in Texas went as far as
saying that the Somalis who run these
companies employ Machiavellian strategies to
send millions of dollars to shadowy characters
in the Middle East under the pretext of
sending the money to needy families in
war-torn Somalia. The amount given by these
editorial writers is staggering-billions of
dollars.
In one of my
past Talking Points I had pointed out that
Xawaala is an informal banking system based on
trust and it is so old that even Chris Colombo
did not yet "discover" Americas when
the Xawaala system was in full gear in the
Muslim World, longer than when Chris's sailing
ship landed in the "New World" and
wrongly thought he was in India, calling the
natives "Indians".
It was first
developed in India and the Middle East before
the introduction of Western banking practices,
and is currently a major remittance system
used around the world. The operators of the
system transfer money without actually moving
it. Money transfer without moving is a
definition of Xawaala that was used
successfully in countries like Somalia whose
banking and other financial institutions have
been destroyed in the civil war more than a
decade ago. In this cyberspace age, the
operator sends the money by Internet, charging
the sender few dollars, and presto, the
beneficiary receives it in a matter of
minutes.
I don't know
about the alleged millions of dollars going to
international terrorists, or what the Western
media prefers to call "Muslim
terrorist" organizations, such as Osama's
Al-Qaeda (The Base) network. What I do know,
however, is that the 100 or 50 dollars from
economically hard-pressed Somalis in the
Diaspora regularly goes to skeleton-looking
mothers, grandmothers and malnutrioned kids in
war-ravaged Somalia, and to others languishing
in squalid refugee camps in neighbouring
countries, such as Utanga, Kakuma, Dhoobley,
Harti Sheikh etc.
The Somalis are
not alone. Immigrant workers, from Mexico and
the Philippines, for example, have gone
through the mill of "illegal" money
transfer system in the 1960s and 1970s until
the operators transformed their money transfer
systems into fully licensed thriving-money
spinning agencies. The difference is that the
Somali operators happened to be Muslims, and
that might have really caused the problem with
companies like Al-Barakaat for example in post
9/11.
Abdusalam Omar,
who prepared a significant report for the UNDP,
Somalia, on the subject of Xawaala had
recommended that: "The operators of this
system must undertake to transform their
operations into legal, efficient and viable
organizations that comply with recognized
international financial standards in order to
meet the needs of their customers for years to
come."
In short, they
must be transparent and cooperative with the
panic-stricken law-enforcement authorities in
the United States post 9/11 and open their
books. This is not only good for their
businesses, but for the hungry and neglected
people at home as well. Also the operators
must respect the laws and regulations of the
United States and Canada, because it was North
America where they made their fortunes and
enjoy relative peace and freedom, thousands of
miles away from the brutal warlords and their
militia gunmen.
On the other hand, the money remittance
managers should be given the benefit of doubt
until proven guilty, and not demonize them.