Somalia must deal a final blow to Al-Shabab
Analysts however warn that despite the fact that Al-Shabab have withdrawn from the port city, peace is still elusive in the war-ravaged nation. For almost one year, Kenyan Army and African Union forces have waged a slow but consistent campaign against the Al-Shabab.
After days of threatening an invasion, the troops launched a beach assault Friday on the southern Somali port city of Kismayo. A day later, the rebel group’s spokesman Ali Mohamud Rage announced their abandoning of Kismayo, explaining the “tactical retreat” with the need “to prevent civilian casualties” brought by an all-out confrontation.
Analysts agree that the loss of Kismayo was the biggest military and political setback the Al-Shabab have faced since the war against the militant organization was launched. “The fall of Kismayo is a game changer because a key source of revenue for the Al-Shabab has been stifled,” Joakim Gundel, a Nairobi-based academic with local think-tank Bridges Analytics said.
“This represents an end to Al-Shabab as an insurgent group with ambitions for territorial control,” he added.
Many believe that Al-Shabab will be hardest hit financially by the fall of the key port city, the latest to have gone into the hands of African Union and Somali forces.
“They rely on the port for financial support, benefiting from the charcoal and sugar trade,” Laura Hammond, said a senior lecturer at London’s School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS). Gundel said that the fall will take Al-Shabab outside their comfort zone and force them to seek financial support elsewhere. “They will have to be dependent on external resources... In a world in which regimes supporting groups such as Al-Shabab are falling, this will not be an easy task,” he said.
He added that the financial pressures may also cause fault lines among the smaller militias that came together to form the Al-Qaeda linked group.
The odds may be firmly stacked against them, but it is emerging that Kismayo’s fall does not spell the end of Al-Shabab.
“They still control large areas of the countryside in southern Somalia, as well as some secondary towns,” said Hammond. “There have been reports of Al-Shabab members fleeing to remote mountainous areas in the contested territory between Somaliland and Puntland. “I would expect them to lie low for a while, carrying out indiscriminate attacks like those seen in Mogadishu in recent weeks,” she added.
The change of tactic by Al-Shabab from open military warfare to guerrilla attacks will not only pose a problem for the forces fighting them, but for the new Somali government too.
Gundel said “Al-Shabab gained a lot of support by playing into the historic rivalries among Somalia’s clans... these differences are still strong, and if the new government fails to address them, the Al-Shabab might find a way back.” All major clans in Somalia — such as the Harti, Ogaden, Marehan, Rahanwein and Galjel — have major interests in the Lower Juba region, whose commercial capital is Kismayo.
“The only way out of this will be for the new government to invite all these clans into the post-Al-Shabab peace process,” Gundel said. Former Kenyan ambassador to Somalia, Mohamed Abdi Affey, agrees that inclusion would be the key to prevent a possible return to violence.
“I am sure the government, together with the Inter Governmental Authority on Development, will put in place an inclusive arrangement because in Somalia, governance can never be left to only one, two or three groups.
“It must be inclusive for sustainable peace to be achieved,” said Affey.
n Agence France Presse
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