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The Isaaq clans of northwestern Somalia also resented what they perceived as
their inadequate representation in Siad Barre's government. This disaffection
crystallized in 1981 when Isaaq dissidents living in London formed the Somali
National Movement (SNM) with the aim of toppling the Siad Barre regime. The
following year, the SNM transferred its headquarters to Dire Dawa, Ethiopia,
from where it launched guerrilla raids into the Woqooyi Galbeed and Togdheer
regions of Somalia. Like the SSDF, the SNM had both military and political
wings, proclaimed itself as a nationwide opposition movement, and tried to
enlist the support of non-Isaaq clans. Initially, the SNM was more successful
than the SSDF in appealing to other clans, and some Hawiye clan leaders worked
with the SNM in the early and mid1980s . Prior to establishing itself within
Somalia in 1988, the SNM used its Ethiopian sanctuary to carry out a number of
sensational activities against the Siad Barre regime, most notably the 1983
attack on Mandera Prison near Berbera, which resulted in the freeing of several
northern dissidents...
In April 1981, a group of Isaaq emigrés living in London formed the Somali
National Movement (SNM), which subsequently became the strongest of Somalia's
various insurgent movements. According to its spokesmen, the rebels wanted to
overthrow Siad Barre's dictatorship. Additionally, the SNM advocated a mixed
economy and a neutral foreign policy, rejecting alignment with the Soviet Union
or the United States and calling for the dismantling of all foreign military
bases in the region. In the late 1980s, the SNM adopted a pro-Western foreign
policy and favored United States involvement in a post-Siad Barre Somalia. Other
SNM objectives included establishment of a representative democracy that would
guarantee human rights and freedom of speech. Eventually, the SNM moved its
headquarters from London to Addis Ababa to obtain Ethiopian military assistance,
which initially was limited to old Soviet small arms.
In October 1981, the SNM rebels elected Ahmad Mahammad Culaid and Ahmad
Ismaaiil Abdi as chairman and secretary general, respectively, of the movement.
Culaid had participated in northern Somali politics until 1975, when he went
into exile in Djibouti and then in Saudi Arabia. Abdi had been politically
active in the city of Burao in the 1950s, and, from 1965 to 1967, had served as
the Somali government's minister of planning. After the authorities jailed him
in 1971 for antigovernment activities, Abdi left Somalia and lived in East
Africa and Saudi Arabia. The rebels also elected an eight-man executive
committee to oversee the SNM's military and political activities.
On January 2, 1982, the SNM launched its first military operation against the
Somali government. Operating from Ethiopian bases, commando units attacked
Mandera Prison near Berbera and freed a group of northern dissidents. According
to the SNM, the assault liberated more than 700 political prisoners; subsequent
independent estimates indicated that only about a dozen government opponents
escaped. At the same time, other commando units raided the Cadaadle armory near
Berbera and escaped with an undetermined amount of arms and ammunition.
Mogadishu responded to the SNM attacks by declaring a state of emergency,
imposing a curfew, closing gasoline stations to civilian vehicles, banning
movement in or out of northern Somalia, and launching a search for the Mandera
prisoners (most of whom were never found). On January 8, 1982, the Somali
government also closed its border with Djibouti to prevent the rebels from
fleeing Somalia. These actions failed to stop SNM military activities.
In October 1982, the SNM tried to increase pressure against the Siad Barre
regime by forming a joint military committee with the SSDF. Apart from issuing
antigovernment statements, the two insurgent groups started broadcasting from
the former Radio Kulmis station, now known as Radio Halgan (struggle). Despite
this political cooperation, the SNM and SSDF failed to agree on a common
strategy against Mogadishu. As a result, the alliance languished.
In February 1983, Siad Barre visited northern Somalia in a campaign to
discredit the SNM. Among other things, he ordered the release of numerous civil
servants and businessmen who had been arrested for antigovernment activities,
lifted the state of emergency, and announced an amnesty for Somali exiles who
wanted to return home. These tactics put the rebels on the political defensive
for several months. In November 1983, the SNM Central Committee sought to regain
the initiative by holding an emergency meeting to formulate a more aggressive
strategy. One outcome was that the military wing--headed by Abdulqaadir Kosar
Abdi, formerly of the SNA--assumed control of the Central Committee by ousting
the civilian membership from all positions of power. However, in July 1984, at
the Fourth SNM Congress, held in Ethiopia, the civilians regained control of the
leadership. The delegates also elected Ahmad Mahammad Mahamuud "Silanyo"
SNM chairman and reasserted their intention to revive the alliance with the SSDF.
After the Fourth SNM Congress adjourned, military activity in northern
Somalia increased. SNM commandos attacked about a dozen government military
posts in the vicinity of Hargeysa, Burao, and Berbera. According to the SNM, the
SNA responded by shooting 300 people at a demonstration in Burao, sentencing
seven youths to death for sedition, and arresting an unknown number of rebel
sympathizers. In January 1985, the government executed twenty- eight people in
retaliation for antigovernment activity.
Between June 1985 and February 1986, the SNM claimed to have carried out
thirty operations against government forces in northern Somalia. In addition,
the SNM reported that it had killed 476 government soldiers and wounded 263, and
had captured eleven vehicles and had destroyed another twenty-two, while losing
only 38 men and two vehicles. Although many independent observers said these
figures were exaggerated, SNM operations during the 1985-86 campaign forced Siad
Barre to mount an international effort to cut off foreign aid to the rebels.
This initiative included reestablishment of diplomatic relations with Libya in
exchange for Tripoli's promise to stop supporting the SNM.
Despite efforts to isolate the rebels, the SNM continued military operations
in northern Somalia. Between July and September 1987, the SNM initiated
approximately thirty attacks, including one on the northern capital, Hargeysa;
none of these, however, weakened the government's control of northern Somalia. A
more dramatic event occurred when a SNM unit kidnapped a Médecins Sans Frontières
medical aid team of ten Frenchmen and one Djiboutian to draw the world's
attention to Mogadishu's policy of impressing men from refugee camps into the
SNA. After ten days, the SNM released the hostages unconditionally.
Siad Barre responded to these activities by instituting harsh security
measures throughout northern Somalia. The government also evicted suspected pro-SNM
nomad communities from the Somali- Ethiopian border region. These measures
failed to contain the SNM. By February 1988, the rebels had captured three
villages around Togochale, a refugee camp near the northwestern Somali-
Ethiopian border.
Following the rebel successes of 1987-88, Somali-Ethiopian relations began to
improve. On March 19, 1988, Siad Barre and Ethiopian president Mengistu Haile
Mariam met in Djibouti to discuss ways of reducing tension between the two
countries. Although little was accomplished, the two agreed to hold further
talks. At the end of March 1988, the Ethiopian minister of foreign affairs,
Berhanu Bayih, arrived in Mogadishu for discussions with a group of Somali
officials, headed by General Ahmad Mahamuud Faarah. On April 4, 1988, the two
presidents signed a joint communiqué in which they agreed to restore diplomatic
relations, exchange prisoners of war, start a mutual withdrawal of troops from
the border area, and end subversive activities and hostile propaganda against
each other.
Faced with a cutoff of Ethiopian military assistance, the SNM had to prove
its ability to operate as an independent organization. Therefore, in late May
1988 SNM units moved out of their Ethiopian base camps and launched a major
offensive in northern Somalia. The rebels temporarily occupied the provincial
capitals of Burao and Hargeysa. These early successes bolstered the SNM's
popular support, as thousands of disaffected Isaaq clan members and SNA
deserters joined the rebel ranks.
Over the next few years, the SNM took control of almost all of northwestern
Somalia and extended its area of operations about fifty kilometers east of
Erigavo. However, the SNM did not gain control of the region's major cities
(i.e., Berbera, Hargeysa, Burao, and Boorama), but succeeded only in laying
siege to them.
With Ethiopian military assistance no longer a factor, the SNM's success
depended on its ability to capture weapons from the SNA. The rebels seized
numerous vehicles such as Toyota Land Cruisers from government forces and
subsequently equipped them with light and medium weapons such as 12.7mm and
14.5mm machine guns, 106mm recoilless rifles, and BM-21 rocket launchers. The
SNM possessed antitank weapons such as Soviet B-10 tubes and RPG- 7s. For air
defense the rebels operated Soviet 30mm and 23mm guns, several dozen Soviet ZU23
2s, and Czech-made twin-mounted 30mm ZU30 2s. The SNM also maintained a small
fleet of armed speed boats that operated from Maydh, fifty kilometers northwest
of Erigavo, and Xiis, a little west of Maydh. Small arms included 120mm mortars
and various assault rifles, such as AK-47s, M-16s, and G-3s. Despite these
armaments, rebel operations, especially against the region's major cities,
suffered because of an inadequate logistics system and a lack of artillery,
mine- clearing equipment, ammunition, and communications gear.
To weaken Siad Barre's regime further, the SNM encouraged the formation of
other clan-based insurgent movements and provided them with political and
military support. In particular, the SNM maintained close relations with the
United Somali Congress (USC), which was active in central Somalia, and the
Somali Patriotic Movement (SPM), which operated in southern Somalia. Both these
groups sought to overthrow Siad Barre's regime and establish a democratic form
of government...
The Isaaq as a clan-family occupy the northern portion of the country. Three
major cities are predominantly, if not exclusively, Isaaq: Hargeysa, the second
largest city in Somalia until it was razed during disturbances in 1988; Burao in
the interior, also destroyed by the military; and the port of Berbera.
Formed in London on April 6, 1981, by 400 to 500 Isaaq
emigrés, the Somali
National Movement (SNM) remained an Isaaq clan-family organization dedicated to
ridding the country of Siad Barre. The Isaaq felt deprived both as a clan and as
a region, and Isaaq outbursts against the central government had occurred
sporadically since independence. The SNM launched a military campaign in 1988,
capturing Burao on May 27 and part of Hargeysa on May 31. Government forces
bombarded the towns heavily in June, forcing the SNM to withdraw and causing
more than 300,000 Isaaq to flee to Ethiopia.
The military regime conducted savage reprisals against the
Isaaq. The same
methods were used as against the Majeerteen-- destruction of water wells and
grazing grounds and raping of women. An estimated 5,000 Isaaq were killed
between May 27 and the end of December 1988. About 4,000 died in the fighting,
but 1,000, including women and children, were alleged to have been bayoneted to
death.
*****
Bitter cross-clan feuding fed by the inept and brutal one-party rule of
Muhammad Siad Barre (Siyad Barrah) came to a head in the spring of 1988 when the
Somali National Movement (SNM) began taking over towns and military
installations in the north. Thousands were killed, and hundreds of thousands of
refugees fled to neighboring Ethiopia. Somalia's capital, Mogadishu, remained in
the hands of the socialist government... In the meantime the SNM made major
gains.
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