Close Menu
Wadani.com: Somali News, Somalia news Analysis.
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Wednesday, July 2
    Wadani.com: Somali News, Somalia news Analysis.
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Somali News
      • Banaadir
      • Galmudug
      • Hirshabelle
      • Jubaland
      • K/Galbeed
      • Puntland
      • Somaliland
    • Xog cusub
      • Federaalka
      • Baarlamaanka
      • Madaxtooyada
      • Xukuumadda
    • Federaalka
    • Caalamka
    • Dhaqaalaha
    • Qormooyinka
    • Xulashada
    Wadani.com: Somali News, Somalia news Analysis.
    Home»Somali Articles»Should Kenya play peacekeeper in Somalia? Shabab attacks raise doubts

    Should Kenya play peacekeeper in Somalia? Shabab attacks raise doubts

    June 10, 2015Updated:June 10, 20157 Mins Read Somali Articles
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Kenya’s role in an African-led military mission in Somalia goes against the practice of not using troops from neighboring countries for such campaigns. And with good reason: the uptick of retaliatory attacks by Al Shabab has made Kenya’s fight personal.

    Amisom_standard

    GARISSA AND NAIROBI, KENYA — As the town stirred from its overnight curfew the morning of April 4, the last students of Garissa University boarded buses at the military airstrip under the watchful eye of Kenyan soldiers.

    Rolling down the sole tarmac road that connects the northeast town to the rest of the country, the students chanted “Bye, bye Garissa!”, relieved to leave behind the violence-ravaged region along the Somali border.

    They had lost scores of classmates two days earlier, when Al Shabab militants rampaged through their campus and killed 148 people, mostly university students who embodied the hopes of a rising generation. Now those who had survived were leaving for hometowns hundreds of miles away to attend funerals, grieve, and regroup.

    The attack on Garissa highlighted Al Shabab’s deadly reach in Kenya, which has deployed peacekeepers to help pacify Somalia. And it revived a national debate over the wisdom of that participation amid a steady uptick in terrorist attacks on Kenyan soil.

    Four years ago, 4,700 Kenyan troops entered Somalia, part of a 22,000-strong African Union peacekeeping mission to restore authority after more than 20 years of chaos. The mission, known as AMISOM, aimed to retake territory from Al Shabab, which espouses an extremist form of Islamist rule. The mission also planned to help expand the powers of the Western-backed central government in Mogadishu.

    Kenya had another goal in Somalia: to make its territory safer after a spate of border incursions by Al Shabab and the kidnappings of aid workers and tourists. Yet this intervention has led to bloody reprisals, from a high-profile attack on a Nairobi mall in 2013 to a slew of killings of Kenyans on buses, in schools, and at mining camps. Critics call it blowback, and blame Kenya’s government for wading into a war it can’t win.

    Previous missions in Somalia, like the initial effort in 2006 led by the Intergovernmental Authority of Development in Eastern Africa, had refrained from using neighbors’ troops in its mission. When AMISOM took over eight years ago, its reliance on troops from Somalia’s neighbors turned on its head the traditional international peacekeeping practice of drawing on troops from afar – Filipinos in Lebanon, Pakistanis in Congo.

    The practice was based on worries about neighbors having their own interest in the outcome of a conflict. But terrorist groups like Al Shabab, Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, or Boko Haram in West Africa are showing that when peacekeeping forces come from neighbors with poorly policed borders, the war can quickly spill over to the homeland.

    “You don’t, in any other mission, see the opposing group carrying out reprisal attacks in the troop-contributing countries because you’re not, in most peacekeeping operations, fighting a terrorist entity with cross-border goals,” says Adam Smith, director of the center for peace operations at the International Peace Institute. Country-led operations, as seen with the fights against Boko Haram or ISIS, are a different story.

    But the ongoing threats have taken too great a toll for Kenya to sit back, say observers. Most recently, Al Shabab made at least two more incursions into Garissa, reportedly infiltrating the village of Yumbis long enough to hoist its flag and a few days later ambushing a group of Kenyan police.

    “The strange part would be not having Kenya part of it in the first place,” says Ambassador Maman Sidikou, the head of AMISOM, to critics who question if neighbors should be used at all. “They should play their role and contribute to peace along their borders, to peace in Somalia, which also means peace for Kenya.”

    The war comes home

    Until 2011, Kenya had mostly played host – to refugees, peace conferences, and members of the Somali business community — and its intervention, an operation dubbed “Operation Linda Nchi” (“Protect the homeland”), ended decades of relative neutrality on Somalia.

    “This intervention was sold on the fact that it would make Kenya safer. Whatever true intentions may have been – and there are many – it was sold as basically that we were going to protect ourselves,” says Cedric Barnes, Nairobi-based Horn of Africa project director for International Crisis Group.

    But today, Kenyans do not feel any safer.  In October 2011, 26 percent of Kenyans said an increase in attacks was more likely as a result of the intervention, according to surveys by Ipsos Kenya. By December 2014, that had climbed to 55 percent.

    Behind this fear is Al Shabab. Since 2013, it has attacked Kenya 63 times, according to data as of late April from the Washington-based Foundation for the Defense of Democracies. Slightly more than half of the 63 attacks in Kenya occurred in just Garissa, Wajir, and Mandera counties. Most of the rest occurred on the coast. 

    Disrupting the norm

    The AU’s Somalia mission wasn’t initially envisioned as a regional effort. The idea that neighbors were too invested to contribute still had traction. But Ethiopia invaded Somalia in 2006 to oust an Islamist government in Mogadishu  and protect its borders. That paved the way for the AU to absorb Kenya’s troops a few months after Kenya’s own unilateral intervention (Ethiopia withdrew from Somalia in 2009 and went in again under the auspices of AMISOM in 2014.) 

    Many experts say AMISOM is much more of a military force than a peacekeeping one – it is trying to defeat an enemy, not achieve a cease-fire between two warring parties.

    “If you’re designing these missions as enforcement missions going after particular enemies, then it does make more sense to have regional players involved,” says Paul Williams, an associate professor at George Washington University in Washington, D.C., with a focus on international peacekeeping. “They’re going to have the will to take the fight to them in a way that these more distant countries do not.”

    Kenya was also one of the only countries coming forward. Although Uganda and Burundi still contribute more troops than the 8,000 from Ethiopia and Kenya, AMISOM would have struggled to reach its mandated troop strength without their help.

    Ambassador Sidikou of AMISOM, says Kenya’s security depends on achieving stability in Somalia and that it would be “unfortunate” if public pressure to pull out, which increased after the Garissa University attack, was heeded.

    In fact, he hopes to see more peacekeeping arrangements like AMISOM’s. His own country, Niger, has sent troops into neighboring Nigeria to fight Boko Haram.

    “Africans have seen an African problem and they came from Africa to solve it,” he says. “That’s the best model you can have.”

    Going in

    There was little public debate in 2011 about Kenya’s decision to go into Somalia. But now the pressure is mounting on the government to justify a continued military mission there.

    AMISOM’s mandate – to shore up the weak central government and other institutions, including the national Army – has been met, to a degree.

    But Kenya’s goal of “protecting the homeland” remains elusive: tourists are staying away and the currency is weakening. Curfews are in effect across the northeast and sometimes the coast, even as the country’s president pleads for the lifting of the US and Europe’s travel warnings. And as seen with Al Shabab’s continued incursions into the northeast, including a multi-hour stay in the town of Yumbis in Garissa in late May, attacks in the northeast are expected to continue.

    “We are all people. We need a safe place to stay,” says Ifrah Aden Shidow, a Red Cross volunteer in Garissa who was one of the first on the scene the day of the Garissa attack in April. She knew many of the students well because she worked with the university’s Red Cross club.

    Ms. Shidow scrolls through a WhatsApp group filled with messages from the deceased club members, including a couple harrowing messages sent from inside the university during the attack: “Are u safe? are u safe??”

    “Noooooooo!!!!” comes the response. “They have me, I am dead.”

    Most of those students in the group are dead now, she says. Shidow saw some of them sprawled dead on the floor in the dormitories as she went searching for survivors.

    “Those students were the future leaders, teachers, doctors, nurses,” she says. “We lost [148] leaders and that is a lot of loss to us.”

    By Ariel Zirulnick

    Source: CS Monitor

    [ad name=”HTML-1″]

    AMISOM Kenya
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleImaaraadka Carabta oo Gaadiid Milateri ugu deeqay ciidamada Soomaaliya (SAWIRRO)
    Next Article US Deputy Defense Secretary Hosts Somali Leaders at Pentagon

    Related Posts

    ABIY AHMED’S MOU WITH MUSE BIHI THREATENS HORN OF AFRICA STABILITY

    January 9, 2024

    Somalia’s strategy for the war against al-Shabaab will condemn the country to perpetual hell

    November 7, 2022

    There is no turning back: We must finish off Al-Shabaab (by President Hassan Sheikh)

    October 16, 2022

    Somalia’s president wants help to fight Africa’s terrorist groups (by Hassan Shiekh)

    July 20, 2022

    A new hope for Somalia and its allies: The future of Türkiye-Somalia relations

    July 4, 2022

    Somalia’s Federalism must be saved from dictatorship (By Hassan Sheikh )

    April 29, 2022

    WARARKII MAANTA

    Senator Cabdi Qeybdiid oo weerar culus ku qaaday Madaxweyne Xasan Sheekh

    May 28, 2025

    Soomaaliya oo halis ugu jirta inay Malaayiin dollar ku lumiso khilaafka Puntland iyo DFS

    May 28, 2025

    Maraykanka oo hoos u dhigay taageeradii Ciidanka Danab iyo xaalad adag oo heysata

    May 28, 2025

    Shirkii Mucaaradka oo furmay iyo Sheekh Shariif oo hoggaaminta la wareegay (Sawirro)

    May 28, 2025

    Dowladda Fedaraalka oo faahfaahin ka bixisay duqeymo Mareykanku kaa fuliyay Jubbada Hoose

    May 28, 2025

    Wadani Online aims to establish itself as a progressive media outlet capable of competing with both regional and international counterparts.
    The primary objective behind the inception of Wadani.com is to create a platform that specializes in investigative journalism, thereby enhancing the quality and depth of media coverage.

    • Facebook
    • Twitter

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    © 2025 Wadani.com .
    • About Wadani
    • Hiraalkeena
    • Baahinteena
    • Contact Us

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    This website uses cookies to process personal data. You may accept or manage your choices by clicking below, including your right to object where legitimate interest is used, or at any time on the privacy policy page. Accept Read More
    Privacy & Cookies Policy

    Privacy Overview

    This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may affect your browsing experience.
    Necessary
    Always Enabled
    Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
    Functional
    Functional cookies help to perform certain functionalities like sharing the content of the website on social media platforms, collect feedbacks, and other third-party features.
    Performance
    Performance cookies are used to understand and analyze the key performance indexes of the website which helps in delivering a better user experience for the visitors.
    Analytics
    Analytical cookies are used to understand how visitors interact with the website. These cookies help provide information on metrics the number of visitors, bounce rate, traffic source, etc.
    Advertisement
    Advertisement cookies are used to provide visitors with relevant ads and marketing campaigns. These cookies track visitors across websites and collect information to provide customized ads.
    Others
    Other uncategorized cookies are those that are being analyzed and have not been classified into a category as yet.
    SAVE & ACCEPT
    Powered by CookieYes Logo