Interview: Al-Shabaab and Somalia's Spreading Famine
Rashid Abdi, Jayshree Bajoria, CFR.org  |   10 Aug 2011

Interviewee: Rashid Abdi, Analyst, Horn of Africa, International Crisis Group
Interviewer: Jayshree Bajoria, Senior Staff Writer
The famine declared in five areas in southern Somalia is expected to
spread across all regions of the south in the coming four to six
weeks, according to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs. The UN estimates twenty-nine thousand children under the age
of five have died in southern Somalia and 3.7 million people are in
need of humanitarian assistance across the country. Rashid Abdi, a
Nairobi-based analyst for the International Crisis Group, calls the
crisis in Somalia "a collective failure of the international
community," which failed to act on early warnings of a crisis, or to
invest in sustainable agriculture to make local communities
self-sufficient. Additionally, al-Shabaab, an Islamic militant group
which controls most of southern Somalia, had banned several
international aid groups from the region in 2009. Though they lifted
the ban last month (al-Jazeera), restrictions remain. The priority
now, Abdi says, is to reach people trapped inside
al-Shabaab-controlled territory, and "if that means negotiating with
al-Shabaab, so be it."

What is the scale of Somalia's humanitarian crisis, and how do you see
it evolving?

The scale of the crisis is unprecedented in many ways. The closest
example you have is the 1984 famine in Ethiopia. Because the
population of Somalia is not that big, the numbers of people who have
died are less, but there's no denying the fact that you have a huge
humanitarian crisis in southern Somalia and you have tens of thousands
of people who have died, mostly children. Now the famine has spread to
regions that used to be the bread basket of Somalia, especially the
Juba valley. The whole of south and central Somalia is now in the
midst of this famine.

Do you fear this humanitarian crisis will spread beyond Somalia,
beyond the Horn of Africa?

This famine is the outcome of many factors. One of them, of course, is
ecological, environmental, and climatic. There hasn't been any
significant rain for the last four years, so the wells have dried up.
You have deforestation in southern Somalia, especially involving
charcoal traders. You have poor land use and overgrazing. So
environmental factors contribute to it. And this goes beyond
Somalia--it extends to the whole Ogaden region of Ethiopia and
northeastern Kenya. But in Kenya, and in Ethiopia especially, you have
a more robust system of coping with disasters. You have a professional
disaster management authority, and both these countries have learned
how to cope with this crisis.

In southern Somalia, you don't have a government; you don't have a
sense of any authority, except for al-Shabaab. So there has been a
neglect of efforts to alleviate this kind of situation, and al-Shabaab
has little experience in this aspect as well. So these regions are all
closely tied together, and many of these so-called environmental
factors are also close together. So in many ways, you can talk of a
regional farming crisis, but at the moment the epicenter is Somalia.

What are the main problems in getting aid to the people in Somalia?

South-central Somalia is controlled by al-Shabaab. Al-Shabaab is
paranoid about international NGOs and a year ago, they banned aid
agencies from helping people in that region. A lot of the crisis is
attributable to the fact that many people whose situation was very
vulnerable did not get adequate help in time. That is why you see this
crisis has reached this level. Al-Shabaab appears to have recently
backtracked on that ban, but it's very difficult to tell who is in
charge in al-Shabaab and very difficult to know their real motive. But
you have flights going into Baidoa, which is controlled by al-Shabaab,
and you have reports of aid agencies now reaching
al-Shabaab-controlled territory in southern Somalia. This is a good
step, but al-Shabaab has not opened all the humanitarian corridors in
southern Somalia. There are still restrictions in place.

There are many other practical and logistical problems in delivering
aid. You have only one port that is open to aid agencies, which is
Mogadishu. Kismayo is not open because it is controlled by al-Shabaab.
But you are talking of port facilities that are completely run
aground; there is no machinery in place, and you have infrastructure
that has not been rehabilitated in the last twenty years. You have
checkpoints by militias extorting money. So the practicalities of
delivery are enormously challenging in Somalia.

How do you interpret al-Shabaab's decision to leave Mogadishu (BBC)
and how will it affect aid delivery?

We should be cautious in saying, "al-Shabaab did this; al-Shabaab said
that." There' s no longer one al-Shabaab; you are talking of many
al-Shabaabs. There was a faction that announced that "we are pulling
out of Mogadishu." But the reports in the last two days clearly
indicate that there are pockets of al-Shabaab presence in Mogadishu,
and they have been conducting attacks against the AU peacekeeping
forces. So, the picture is much more complicated.

Has the famine weakened al-Shabaab in any way?

Al-Shabaab has been enormously weakened by this crisis. Many are
blaming al-Shabaab for catalyzing the [crisis] by locking out aid
agencies. Al-Shabaab has been under enormous pressure from clan
leaders in the region to act fast, but they have been dragging their
feet, and when they reacted it was probably too late. Tens of
thousands of children have already died. Tens of thousands of people
have fled as refugees to eastern Kenya and southeastern Ethiopia. Many
in Somalia, even those who initially supported al-Shabaab, are now
blaming them and seeing them as culpable in this crisis.

Does this present an opportunity to stabilize the country?

If al-Shabaab was a cohesive organization and it was serious about
averting humanitarian crisis in southern Somalia, then there would
have been an opportunity. The problem is that you have a string of
factions of al-Shabaab; you don't know who speaks for al-Shabaab. Even
engaging them on the question of provisions of humanitarian supplies
to the vulnerable populations in southern Somalia is no longer
credible, because you don't know how senior or powerful that
interlocutor is. Unless we know the power configurations within
al-Shabaab, unless we know who calls the shots and who is in charge,
it will be difficult for this crisis to have a peace dividend.

Potentially there is an opportunity that you may cut a deal with one
faction or another. But what if you have a faction that doesn't like
it, that creates its own challenges. As long as al-Shabaab is
fragmented and deeply divided as a group, the possibilities of
engagement for a positive result are very remote. Many had hoped that
engaging al-Shabaab on humanitarian corridors and a ceasefire for a
brief period [would] kick-start a positive dynamic. But I don't think
we are there.

Do you think the international community is doing enough to alleviate
the humanitarian crisis in Somalia and the rest of the Horn? And what
more can they do?

This is a failure of the whole international system of aid delivery.
We had excellent analysis coming out of Somalia on a potential food
crisis. We had all the early-warning systems many months ago, but
perhaps everyone thought, "Things will not be that bad." This is a
collective failure of the international community.

What should be the main priorities of the international community in
the short term?

Reach those people who are desperately in need, especially those who
are trapped inside al-Shabaab-controlled territory in southern
Somalia. Every effort must be made to reach out to those people. If
that means negotiating with al-Shabaab, so be it. It is actually more
moral to engage al-Shabaab in that than anything else, to save
millions of lives.

Somalis' displacement will continue until there is a resolution of the
crisis, a resolution of the political conflict, and that appears far
away because of what's going on in south Somalia.

Beyond emergency aid, what would be your policy recommendations for
the international community to prevent such crises in the future?

We need to learn from this crisis that there are many factors that
contributed to it. One is conflict. And conflict resolution should be
essential. The epicenter of this famine is southern Somalia, which
traditionally used to be the bread basket of the country. So the
question to ask is, "Why are we in this state?" And it's clear it is
because the [international community has] not made the investment that
needs to be made in those [famine-affected] communities in how to
[improve] agriculture, how to build their coping mechanisms. We need
to help those communities become self-sufficient because they are
capable of it.

We don't act until the crisis is in full bloom and then we throw bags
of wheat. That is not how to deal with crisis. We need to help
communities to fend for themselves, to help themselves, to rebuild
their traditional methods of coping. Somalia has had many severe
droughts in the past, but why has this drought turned into a famine?
There are reasons for it, and those are the lessons we need to learn.
And we need to act fast when we get evidence that things are really
serious.

So are you asking the international community to invest in agriculture?

Absolutely, and not only in agriculture. People have various methods
of coping. For example, the Juba Valley and the Shebelle region are
drained by two huge rivers: the Shebelle River and the Juba River.
They drain massive volumes of water into the Indian Ocean. So if we
build methods of water conservation in those parts, we will have
enough water for human use, for livestock use, and for agriculture as
well. And these systems used to exist. It's just that now there isn't
any government.

We also need to criminalize and punish those who are involved in the
charcoal trade, because they are contributing to this crisis. Much of
southern Somalia has now turned into a lunar landscape because of the
[deforestation] work of criminal mafia groups who are involved in the
charcoal trade. We should criminalize the buying of Somali charcoal
too, tightening the screws both on the supply end and on the demand
end.

What are the implications of large-scale displacements of Somalis who
are fleeing to Kenya and Ethiopia, countries also facing some level of
drought?

Somalis' displacement will continue until there is a resolution of the
crisis, a resolution of the political conflict and that appears far
away because of what's going on in south Somalia. When we talk about
the drought in northeastern Kenya and Ethiopia, these are places where
despite a lot of hardships, you have governments in place, you have
administrations that are in place, and they have better coping
methods.

CFR.org

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