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7 killed as aid is looted in Somalia! August 5, 2011

Posted by Chris Mark in Uncategorized.
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Reminiscent of 1993 when killing and looting aid became the norm when Somali Warlords were in power and that led to 18 US service members being killed in fierce fighting; Somali refugees at the largest refugee camp in Mogadishu say seven people were shot dead when government soldiers opened fire after a looting rampage broke out during a food distribution.

One refugee, Muse Sheik Ali, said government soldiers tried to steal food at a World Food Program feeding site Friday, and then refugees began to loot the aid. Ali said soldiers then opened fire, killing seven people.

Another refugee, Abdi Awale Nor, also said seven people died. He called the scene “carnage” and said soldiers “ruthlessly shot everyone.”

Tens of thousands of Somalis fleeing famine have crowded into refugee camps in Mogadishu. But delivering food aid in the near lawless environment is proving to be a major challenge.

The lawlessness throughout the region will only bleed over with more pirates operating in greater numbers ultimately hijacking more commercial ships transiting throughout the Gulf of Aden, Indian Ocean and Persian Gulf.

U.S. relaxes terror rules against Somali extremists! August 2, 2011

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The Obama administration sought to assure aid groups Tuesday that they can deliver desperately needed food to famine-stricken parts of Somalia without fear of prosecution, even if some assistance is diverted to Al-Qaeda linked extremists blamed for helping deliver hundreds of thousands of people to the brink of starvation.

Administration officials said the U.S. has issued new guidelines on laws prohibiting material assistance to al-Shabab, which have been criticized by humanitarian organizations as a contributing factor the crisis. Charities must only pledge their best efforts to combat attempts by al-Shabab to hoard aid or collect taxes on supplies, they said.

Drought has left some 12 million people in Ehtiopia, Kenya and Somalia needing help, though official famine zones are only in Somali areas controlled by al-Shabab. That has challenged aid groups because of al-Shabab’s hostility to them and the perceived threat of American prosecution in cases of inadvertent support for a U.S.-designated terrorist body.

The shift could allow more U.S. aid to be directed toward the World Food Program’s operations in Somalia. The U.N. said Tuesday that unless it sees a massive increase in donations, the famine will spread inside Somalia. It called for another $1.4 billion in support.

The shipping industry collectively should realize that the deteriorating situation in Somalia will only exacerbate the piracy problem and that more ships will be hijacked over the next several years.

Italian government pays millions to Somali TFG during hijack talks! August 2, 2011

Posted by Chris Mark in Uncategorized.
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The deepwater tugboat MV Buccaneer was slowly towing two large barges at 4-5 knots in the Gulf of Aden.

Because it was moving too slowly to join a convoy, and because its rear deck was designed to be low and to the water line–or low and slow–the crew of 10 Italians, 5 Romanians and 1 Croat was an easy target for Somali pirates.  2-3 weeks after being hijacked  the Italian Navy ship San Giorgio arrived in the vicinity to take up a position approximately eight miles off the coast of Somalia.  Italian Special Forces, who arrived on the San Giorgio, routinely positioned themselves and their small boats in close proximity to the Buccaneer so that they could react within 20-30 seconds to an assault by the pirates on the hostages.

The Italian Crisis Unit worked under the direct supervision of the “highest levels” of the Italian Government, using a “three-pillar approach of diplomatic, military and intelligence resources.  Under Italian law, no ransom could be paid to release the sailors.

The owner of one of the barges offered to pay a ransom, but was informed that proceeding with that course of action would result in prosecution by the Italian courts.  The Italian government had an aversion to a military operation because of the negative Italian public opinion that would likely follow any loss of life.

At some point–and this is where things get extremely blurred– Italian Special Forces were cleared to board the Buccaneer after all the pirates vacated the ship.  The crew was believed to have been treated reasonably well with the exception of a “beating on one of the Romanians” by the pirates.

So what did the Italian government do and how much was paid?  It paid financial support in 2009 dedicated to “Somali institutions and to the peace process” totaling 13 million Euros or $18.5 million USD.  Additional monies have been distributed through the Italian Development Cooperation.

The official story on the Buccaneer release is a substantial but incomplete accounting of factors that brought this situation to a peaceful conclusion.  Gaining the release of the Italian vessel and hostages was a top priority for the Italian government, and rightfully so, but how the situation got to where it was completely preventable.  Prime Minister Berlusconi himself reportedly made many of the early critical decisions.

Think of the cost benefit ratio that a small armed security element could have provided at a fraction of the cost both economically and politically, for both the shipping company and the Italian government.


Rain adds misery to Somalia famine! July 31, 2011

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Tens of thousands of famine-stricken Somali refugees were cold and drenched after torrential rains pounded their makeshift structures overnight into early Sunday in the capital, leading to appeals for aid.

Aid agencies have limited reach in Somalia where Islamist militants are waging an insurgency against the country’s weak U.N.-backed government.

The most dangerous group among the militants —- the Al-Qaeda-linked al-Shabab —- has barred major relief organizations from operating in the territories it controls.  The U.N. said tens of thousands already have died in Somalia in areas held by the Islamist rebels because food aid could not reach them.

The African Union peacekeeping force fears that al-Shabab may try to attack the camps that now house tens of thousands of famine refugees in Mogadishu, disrupting even further the distribution of food aid. The AU force launched a new offensive Thursday to push the militants’ front line farther back from the camps.

Special Ops chief warns of Al-Qaeda 2.0….Somalia named! July 28, 2011

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The top commander of U.S. special operations forces said Wednesday that Usama bin Laden’s Al-Qaeda is bloodied and “nearing its end,” but he warned the next generation of militants could keep special operations fighting for a decade to come.

Navy SEAL Adm. Eric T. Olson described the killing of bin Laden by a special operations raid on May 2 as a near-killing blow for what he called “Al Qaeda 1.0,” as created by bin Laden and led from his hideout in Pakistan.

“It will morph, it will disperse,” he said. “It will become in some ways more westernized, (with) dual passport holders” and “fewer cave dwellers,” he said.

Olson said others like al-Awlaki (the American cleric in Yemen) will probably refine their message to appeal to a wider audience, and seek ungoverned spaces to operate from, where they can smuggle in weapons and train their followers. He described how current offshoots like al-Awlaki’s Al Qaeda of the Arabian Peninsula in Yemen are cooperating with militants in Somalia, who in turn are raising money for terrorist operations via ransoms paid to pirates, describing what he called an “invisible bridge” between the two.

He said the fight against all versions of Al Qaeda could keep U.S. special operations forces deploying at the same pace for another decade, even as U.S. conventional forces draw down from places like Iraq and Afghanistan.