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Growing radicalization among youth in Somalia

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Title: Growing radicalization among youth in Somalia


1
Growing radicalization among youth in Somalia
  • By Lilla Schumicky
  • PhD Candidate/ University of Bradford/ Peace
    Studies
  • Africa Conflict Monitoring Group Coordinator /
    University of Bradford
  • UNDP Somalia Intern
  • ACTED Area Coordinator / North-West Kenya

2
Hypothesis
  • Radicalization among youth is currently
    increasing in Somalia, especially after the
    Ethiopian intervention in 2007. In order to
    mitigate the radicalization among youth, it is
    crucial to understand the motivations and
    contributing factors. Once they are
    deconstructed, community based, bottom up
    approach national interventions could decrease
    the level of radicalization, through prevention,
    rehabilitation and reintegration.

3
Introduction
  • The Islamic Court Union (ICU) took over control
    of South and middle Somalia in 2006
  • Mass engagement of youth in fighting appeared,
    after the invasion of Somalia by the US supported
    Ethiopian troops, which have overthrown the ICU
    in 2007
  • From both national and international environment
    youth joined various armed factions in order to
    defeat the invaders
  • From the diasporas in the US and Europe youth
    started to disappear and moved back to Somalia.
    In 2007, 23 youth moved from Minneapolis to
    Somalia according to the Central Intelligence
    Agency (CIA). 8 persons were judged on court for
    recruitment of youth

4
Various armed factions
  • The ICU had a specially established youth wing
    that was under the command of a small group of
    people lead by Sheikh Muhtar Robow al-Shabaab
  • ICU was commanded by Sheikh Sharif Ahmed and
    Hassan Dahir Awey
  • Sheikh Sharif is the current minister of the
    Transitional Federal Governement (TFG)
  • Hassan Dahir Aweys has formed the other main
    opposition group Hizbul Islam
  • Most youth both locally and internationally
    joined al-Shabaab or Hizbul Islam

ICU
Ethiopians
TFG
Hizbul Islam
Al-Shabaab
Ahlu Sunna
AMISOM
5
The major groupsHizbul Islam al-Shabaab
  • Relations
  • Hijbul Islamiya and al-Shabaab are sharing common
    ideology and interests
  • Both are mainly supported by the diaspora and
    external actors such as Eritrea. However recent
    terrorist attacks such as the Shamo Hotel
    Graduation attack in December 2009 offset the
    support by the diaspora.
  • Both are fractions originating and a type of
    continuation of ICU however
  • HI is militarily less organized
  • HI has a more centralized leadership
  • Al-Ss leadership and military officers are
    trained foreign fighters from Afghanistan,
    Pakistan, Iraq, Chechnya linked to al-Qaeda
  • Al-S has different units operating separately

6
The major groupsHizbul Islam al-Shabaab
  • It is an increasingly feeble and unreliable
    alliance of various armed groupss
  • Stated interests
  • To fight the Wests puppet government the TFG,
    which is considered to be infidel
  • To fight all of its supporters such as Ahlu Sunna
    and AMISOM
  • To uproot all external / international
    interventions in any form such as humanitarian or
    development aid, military support etc
  • To introduce a strict version of Sharia law
  • To fight the Global jihad beyond the border of
    Somalia and spread it first to the neighboring
    countries such as Kenya and Ethiopia and than to
    Africa and the West
  • To support other jihadist movements in different
    Muslim countries such as Palestine
  • Dufferences
  • HI and al-Shabaab is fighting each other in order
    to gain economical control over strategic points
  • HI Hidden interests
  • To control Mogadishu hence its leader Awey
    belongs to Ayr clan, which is a sub-clan of
    Hawiye and one of the most powerful in the
    capital city
  • Personal bad feelings towards the current
    president Awey was left out of the deal while
    establishing the current TFG
  • Al-Shabaab s hidden intrests
  • To support farmers of the Rahanweyn clan and
    Leysan sub-clan from where Sheikh Mukhtar Robow
    Abu Mansur the leader is originating from by
    banning food aid distribution by aid agencies
    such as WFP

7
Causes and contributing factors
  • 45 percent of the population is below 14 and
    years and the median age of the Somalias total
    population is 17.5 (CIA Factbook).
  • A three level analysis is provided in order to
    capture the possible angles of the motivations of
    joining on individual, social and institutional
    levels. These three are interlinked and it is not
    possible to separate one from the other however
    dominant causes can be identified on all three
    levels.

8
Causes and contributing factors
  • Individual level engagement
  • Linked to the psychological status of the mind
  • The whole society, which has been impacted by the
    war became brutal and brutalized in the same time
  • Traumatisation is caused by the separation of
    family members, torture and rape, frequent
    displacements, lack of financial support and
    adaption of a new way of life from the nomadic
    society to the displaced and aid dependant
    society
  • These factors lead to depression and sadness that
    further acts as being the only solution for all
    problems.
  • Lack of hope The sixteen failed peace-talks the
    two previous and the third currently failing
    government
  • Growing anger and bitterness towards the
    international community due to the lack of
    support encourages global jihad against the West
  • War caused the fragmentation of the nuclear
    family child abuse became rampant
  • Feeling of Revenge (disappearance of the
    traditional xeer)
  • Participation is based on money, the promise of
    money and khaat According to the Kenya National
    Agency for the Campaign Against Drug Abuse a
    daily 300 000 is paid by Somalis for the drug.
  • Guarantee from the various factions that they
    will have the freedom to loot, extort and rape.
    The looting is officially part of the salary and
    subsidizes the low wage which is not paid
    regularly.

9
Causes and contributing factors
  • Social level engagement
  • High rate of unemployment - about 80 percent in
    Mogadishu according to SAACID
  • If the nuclear family has enough funds then they
    may buy a gun, most frequently AK47 machine gun
  • Families decide to dedicate one of the sons for a
    security job
  • Environmental destruction took considerable part
    of the lack of unemployment and lack of
    opportunities

10
Causes and contributing factors
  • Institutional level engagement
  • Cheap human resource that is easy mobilize and
    recruit
  • Ideology, the Salafi-Wahabbism, which lies along
    Sayid Qutbs philosophy that emphasizes the
    implementation of an extremely strict version of
    sharia law
  • al-Shabaab becomes the family of the youth where
    is relative security and order can be found
  • Proliferation and the extremely easy access to
    small arms forms of currency
  • Radio game shows, which were run by the Shabaabs
    in Southern Somalia, AK 47s, hand grenades and
    anti tank landmines were the prizes for the
    winners if they could correctly answer questions
    related to the Quran. The host of the quiz show
    has said
  • The reason the young men were rewarded with
    weapons is to encourage them to participate in
    the ongoing holy war against the enemies of Allah
    in Somalia, AFP news agency quoted al-Shabab's
    Sheikh Abdullahi Alhaq on the prize-giving
    ceremony.

11
DDR in Mogadishu
  • Initiatives to decrease the number of
    participants in various armed groups have been
    taken since 2001 in the form of Disarmament
    Demobilization and Reintegration (DDR)
    programmes.
  • Three DDR attempts took place solely in Mogadishu
    between 2001 and 2007.
  • It is traditionally comes along with Security
    Sector Reforms (SSR) after when a peace agreement
    is signed and major direct violence is ended.
    (Negative peace -gt aiming toward positive peace
    decrease structural and cultural violence Galtung
    2003)

12
DDR in Mogadishu
  • First DDR in 2001
  • Funded by the Italian Government through UNESCO
    it has demobilized and provided four months
    vocational training for 225 militiamen
  • It has not contained any of the elements of DDR
    such as disarmament, demobilization or
    reintegration and was in fact purely the
    remobilization of militiamen into the police and
    official military forces after vocational
    training.
  • The main desire of the militiamen was to find
    gainful employment after training where they were
    ready to participate

13
DDR in Mogadishu
  • Second DDR 2003-2004
  • Characters of the II. DDR bottom-up grassroots
    programming, with strong international
    partnership
  • Three hundred participants 150 were from the
    civil society and half of them were women
  • The aim of the involvement of the women was to
    encourage them not to buy guns for their sons and
    make them understand that there are other ways of
    earning living but encouraging them to join
  • At least one, working automatic weapon had to be
    handed over, in order to be able to participate
    on the training

14
DDR in Mogadishu
  • Third DDR 2005- 2006
  • 512 freelance militiamen were provided with micro
    credit and vocational training
  • In 2008 when a Tracer survey was conducted forty
    percent of them were still employed despite the
    dire circumstances and extremely bad security
    situation (full-blown insurgency in the capital)
  • It had a long-term effect because participants
    were saying I gave up robbing people, I care
    about myself now and dont like bad deeds, I
    have a free life and know between good and bad,
    I have character to live with people,
  • Community-based and community-owned approach of
    the entire DDR programme.

15
Arms Violence Reduction Project (AVRP)
  • In spite of this success of the previous three
    DDR programmes the donor community is not
    committed of funding further DDR programmes in
    Somalia yet UNDP has further developed it into
    Arms Violence Reduction Project (AVRP).
  • The main justification of AVRP is that Somali
    people are prisoners of a cycle of armed violence
    from, which is extremely hard to break out of.
    The community is influenced by impunity and weak
    justice system the sharia courts are no longer
    functioning in many places.
  • Prevention would be realized in non-violent
    conflict management and cure in rehabilitation
    and reintegration of ex-militiamen into the
    society. The project would consist of three
    phases
  • 1) Security diagnosis where the type of violence,
    the nature of conflict and the endogenous
    resources will be identified.
  • 2) The set up of community security plan by
    consulting with community members on district
    levels.
  • 3) Execution of the activities by entrusted local
    NGOs
  • The plan has been prepared in 2008 but funding
    hasnt yet arrived. Instead the financial support
    goes towards the extremely week Transitional
    Federal Government. However the TFG is not in the
    position to implement any kind of DDR in Somalia.

16
Conclusion
  • Radicalization of youth is currently increasing
    due to the various individual, social and
    institutional external and internal push factors.
  • DDR in a form of bottom-up approach with
    community based ownership could be one of the
    possible solutions for the mitigation of
    radicalization of youth in Somalia by targeting
    each push factors on the various levels, and
    aiming towards prevention, demobilization and
    reintegration.

17
  • Thank you for your attention
  • l.Schumicky_at_bradford.ac.uk
  • Lilla.schumicky_at_acted.org
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