Kenya after Westgate: more trouble ahead – By Richard Dowden
Posted on September 27,
2013<http://africanarguments.org/2013/09/27/kenya-after-westgate-more-trouble-ahead-by-richard-dowden/>by
AfricanArgumentsEditor<http://africanarguments.org/author/africanargumentseditor/>

**What does the appalling attack on people at the Westgate Shopping Centre
signify? Does it mean that Al Shabaab is getting stronger or weaker? Was it
a show of strength, striking at a multinational target in the heart of
Nairobi, or a desperate if spectacular attack on civilians at an easy,
poorly-protected target? Is this the new Shabaab or was it an Al Qaeda
operation using the Shabaab brand name?

Some of these questions may be answered if the Israeli Mossad interrogators
get the surviving attackers to talk. Unlike Western interrogators, the
Isrealis are not constrained in the methods they use.

Inspired by the Saudi Wahabist interpretation of Islam – ascetic, extreme,
exclusive and violent – Al Qaeda feeds on despair rather than hope. It
operates like the mafia, growing rich by terrifying wealthy Arabs into
paying protection money. It transformed traditional Somali society by
killing local imams or forcing them to abandon their traditional Sufi
practices and Somali customs. For example, traditionally Somali women
dressed in colourful flowing robes and played prominent social roles. Now
they are dressed head to toe in black, dark brown or green and excluded
from decision-making and debate.

But in places of extreme injustice you can see why such a millenarian
religion might flourish. Somalia has had no government since the late 1980s
and has been abandoned by the world from 1995 when the Americans fled and
refused to fund the UN force too. Since then the south has been at war,
there has been no state, little education or development, permanent
insecurity and starvation. Millions have fled and a vast refugee camp,
Dadaab, with almost a million inhabitants, has grown up on the Kenyan
border.

After decades of clan warfare the people of Somalia rebelled against the
warlords. For a brief period in 2005 there was peace under the Islamic
Courts Union, some were Al Shabaab but others more moderate. However,
Ethiopia (Somalia’s traditional enemy), decided they must be destroyed and
invaded with American help, bringing back the warlords. That radicalised
the courts and many young men were recruited by Al Shabaab, well-funded by
the Saudis and Gulf states. But the Ethiopian invasion failed and an
African Union force moved in. It began to push Al Shabaab off the streets
of Mogadishu. In 2011 the Kenyan army invaded from the south and drove Al
Shabaab out of the lucrative port of Kismayo. The movement was merely
driven underground and into the countryside – a far less lucrative prospect
than the towns in terms of tax and theft.

Shortly afterwards Shabaab formed an alliance with Al Qaeda. Until then
Shabaab saw its mission as controlling territory and people in Somalia. Al
Qaeda on the contrary believes in a messianic destruction of western power
on earth and its replacement by Islamic law. Its tactics are to launch
spectacular terror attacks on civilians. The movement became divided and
Godane, closer to Al Qaeda than Aweys, organised a coup.

The background to the coup is well explained
here<http://africanarguments.org/2012/03/19/understanding-the-al-shabaabal-qaeda-%E2%80%98merger%E2%80%99-by-abdi-aynte/>
.

The replacement of Aweys by Godane internationalised Al Shabaab and brought
it out of Somali internal politics and closer to Al Qaeda’s global agenda.
The Westgate bombing is the first manifestation of that.

In the short term what are the dangers? One would be that elements of the
AU force and the Kenyan army take revenge on Somalis in Somalia, on the
vast camps along the Somali Kenya border or in the traditional Somali area
of Eastleigh in Nairobi. There are already scores of reported cases of
brutality and rape by Kenyan police on Somali refugees. We know little of
how the AU and Kenyan forces behave in Somalia and are regarded by ordinary
Somalis there. In the mid 1990s almost every army of the 36 in the UN
coalition in Somalia, Unisom – including even the Canadians – was accused
of brutality or other crimes against civilians. It would be surprising if
the African Union force is any more disciplined, particularly since many
Somalis can be racist towards other Africans and reactive to armed
foreigners on Somali territory, as I saw frequently during the American and
UN occupation.

In these circumstances Al Shabaab, with its weapons and an ideology, might
easily find willing Somali recruits or be able to force others to fight for
it. But were they the killers at Westgate? Good liberals like myself
believe that people who grow up in appalling circumstances, suffer hunger
and sickness in childhood and see horrific things from an early age, can
easily be persuaded to become rigidly ideological and violent themselves.
But again and again in recent years the perpetrators of terror turn out to
be young middle class kids from decent homes.  It will be important to see
the backgrounds of the attackers at Westgate.

What are the other consequences from this apart from the obvious ones like
tighter security in Nairobi?  These are my guesses:

   - More attacks like Westgate in Africa, spreading to countries on the
   southern border of the Sahara.
   - Renewed efforts to strengthen the Somali government in Mogadishu.
   - Stoical resistance by the populations of Kenya and Uganda. No Somali
   pogroms.
   - Tourists keep coming to both countries and their economies keep on
   growing but their populations become more enraged about the corruption of
   their ruling classes which have failed to protect them.
   - Outside Africa – realisation that the real change must come in Saudi
   Arabia and the Gulf, but Europe’s dependence on its oil makes this
   difficult.
   - And finally, the beginning of the end of the International Criminal
   Court. Western governments will need a stable strong government in Kenya.
   There is no way the West is going to allow President Kenyatta, who has
   shown good leadership qualities during the crisis (and his vice-president
   William Ruto), to spend months at a trial in The Hague and then go to jail.

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