Somali HistoryIn the 7th century Arabs and Persians developed a series of trading posts along the Gulf of Aden and
the Indian Ocean. In the 10th century the area was peopled by Somali nomads and pastoral GALLA from southwest Ethiopia. For
the next 900 years Somalis spread throughout the Horn of Africa. Britain and Italy occupied different parts of the territory
in the 1880s, and until World War II, Somalia remained under colonial control. In 1941, Britain occupied Italian Somaliland
and in 1948 gave the OGADEN region to Ethiopia, although it was populated largely by Somalis. By 1950 the United Nations had
voted to grant independence to Somalia, and in 1960 the two former colonies were united to form the Somali Republic.
Somalia was ruled by a civilian government until 1969, when President Siad Barre came to power in a military coup. His
Somali Revolutionary Socialist party, created in 1976, formed the government. Areas inhabited primarily by Somalis, including
Djibouti, the Ogaden, and northeast Kenya, had long been considered lost Somali territories. Somalia invaded the Ogaden in
1977, but Ethiopia regained control of the area, and Soviet forces were expelled from Somalia in 1977 for their support of
Ethiopia. The country then received U.S. and other Western aid (mostly food for its refugee population). Sporadic conflict
with Ethiopia continued until 1988. Armed domestic opposition to Siad Barre began in the north in 1988 with the Isaaq-based
Somali National Movement (SNM) and was brutally suppressed. Other clan-backed groups, most notably the Hawiye United Somali
Congress (USC) and the Ogadeni Somali Patriotic Movement (SPM), joined the antigovernment struggle, and Siad Barre fled on
Jan. 27, 1991. In May the SNM declared northern Somalia the independent Republic of Somaliland, an act that was not recognized
by any foreign nation. Northern Somalia has since governed itself independently, completing a planned two-year transition
to multiparty democracy with the indirect election of a new president in May 1993.
Elsewhere in Somalia, fighting soon erupted between various rebel groups, most notably those of transitional president
Ali Mahdi Mohammed and the Aidids -Father/Son- (both USC subclan warlords). Violence in Mogadishu continued after authority
for the peacekeeping effort was transferred from U.S. to UN forces on May 1, 1993. After the death of 18 U.S. soldiers in
a firefight with forces loyal to Aidid in October, the United States announced plans to leave Somalia. The last U.S. combat
troops departed on Mar. 25, 1994, officially bringing the 15-month U.S. mission to a close. Later that year, as a result of
renewed violence and a lack of progress in diplomatic efforts to create a new political structure for the country, the UN
reduced the size of its peacekeeping force in Somalia.
Siad Barre died in exile in Lagos, Nigeria, on Jan. 2, 1995. The UN mandate, which had been scheduled to expire on Oct.
31, 1994, was briefly extended, but the last UN troops withdrew from Somalia on Mar. 3, 1995. In the absence of a strong central
government, the civil war continued; renewed fighting also erupted in northern Somalia. Neither Aidid nor his rival claimants
to the presidency were recognized by the UN or other international organizations, and Aidid was ousted as the chairman of
his own faction in June 1995.
Back to SCA
|