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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Origins  



1.1  First Sharia Courts  



1.1.1  The Sheikh Ali-Dhere court  







1.2  Rise of the Mogadishu Islamic Courts  







2 Consolidation of Islamic Courts  



2.1  Military capacity  





2.2  Rise of the Transitional Federal Government  







3 ICU, warlords and War on Terror  



3.1  Warlord conflict  





3.2  CIA intervention  





3.3  Defeat of the warlord alliance and seizure of Mogadishu  







4 Rule over Mogadishu and southern Somalia (June  December 2006)  



4.1  ICU offensive, deployment of Ethiopian troops  



4.1.1  First deployment of Ethiopian forces  









5 Khartoum ICU/TFG talks  



5.1  First Khartoum meeting (June 2006)  





5.2  Second Khartoum meeting (September 2006)  





5.3  Baidoa Suicide Bombing and capture of Kismayo  







6 Criticism and allegations  





7 Ethiopian invasion and downfall  



7.1  Somalia after the ICU  



7.1.1  Rise of Al-Shabaab and conflict with ICU remnants  









8 Creation of the ARS party and merger with TFG  





9 See also  





10 References  





11 Bibliography  





12 Further reading  














Islamic Courts Union






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Marchantiophyta (talk | contribs)at19:16, 17 September 2023. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.
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Islamic Courts Union
Midowga Maxkamadaha Islaamiga  (Somali)
LeaderSharif Sheikh Ahmed[1]
Governing bodyIslamic Courts Supreme Council
Founded2000
DissolvedJanuary 2007
Preceded bySharia Courts
Succeeded byAlliance for the Re-liberation of Somalia
HeadquartersMogadishu
IdeologyIslamism
ReligionSunni Islam

The Islamic Courts Union (Somali: Midowga Maxkamadaha Islaamiga) was a legal and political organization formed to address the lawlessness that had gripped Somalia since the fall of the Siad Barre regime in 1991 during the Somali Civil War.

During the early years of the Somali Civil WarinMogadishu, a new phenomenon emerged — the establishment of Sharia courts to impose law and order on various volatile neighborhoods of the city. These independent courts often found their existence being threatened by warlords, which necessitated cooperation between them that would eventually lead to their unification into the entity known as the Islamic Courts Union (ICU) in 2000. Comprising many different courts, the union was a diffuse organization with rivaling leaders sending conflicting messages about the group's goals. Some members had national political ambitions, while others wanted to focus on resolving local disputes and bringing people closer to Islam.[2][3] The ICU garnered widespread support among Somalis, who regarded Islam as one of the few remaining trustworthy institutions in the aftermath of the state's collapse. By originating from the grassroots level, asserting their governance under the mantle of religious impartiality and fighting the widely despised warlords controlling much of the city, the ICU rapidly gained the confidence of a populace exhausted by warfare. Given the country's pervasive wartime inter-clan tensions, the ruling of Islamic neutrality presented an alluring option to many Somali citizens.[4][3][5]

In the summer of 2006, the ICU decisively defeatedaSomali warlord alliance funded by the American Central Intelligence Agency and became the first entity to consolidate control over all of Mogadishu since the collapse of the state in 1991.[6] The period that followed is widely heralded as the most stable and productive period Somalia had seen up to that point since the outbreak of the civil war.[7][8][3] Residents of Mogadishu were finally able to move around the city without fear of attack, the international airport and seaport were opened for the first time in over a decade, a massive debris clean up campaign was started and there was a significant reduction of arms on the streets.[9][2][10]

Six months into their reign, the Islamic Courts Union would be toppled during the final days of 2006 by an Ethiopian-led military intervention, supported by the United States.[11][12][13][14] The organizational structure of the ICU would collapse early on in 2007 due to the invasion and resulting internal disagreements.[2] The 2006–2009 War in Somalia that followed would consequently bring internationally recognized Transitional Federal Government (TFG) to power.[15][16] Following the collapse of the courts, the majority of the ICU leadership would seek refuge abroad in Eritrea. Consequently a radical youth militia within the military wing of the Islamic Courts, the now-infamous Al-Shabaab, stayed behind and invoked jihad against the American backed Ethiopian invasion, initially greatly empowering themselves as a popular resistance movement.[2]

High-ranking members of the Islamic Courts would later found the Alliance for the Re-liberation of Somalia (ARS) in late 2007, which would later merge with the TFG. Former chairman of the Islamic Courts Union, Sharif Sheikh Ahmed, became president of Somalia in 2009, replacing successfully the Transitional Government with the Federal Government of Somalia. In 2012, the country adopted a new constitution that declared Somalia an Islamic state with Sharia as its primary source of law.[2]

Origins

The Islamic courts were not the first attempt to use Islam to quell the growing disorder in Somalia. Just before the full outbreak of the Somali Civil War, a group of sixty highly prominent members of Somali society under the banner of "Islamic Call" published a public manifesto addressed to President Mohammed Siad Barre. The manifesto warned that he had committed serious transgressions against the laws of Islam and called for him to peacefully step down and transition power, but their attempts were unsuccessful.[2]

First Sharia Courts

The first attempts to use Islamic law (Sharia) to build local stability began sometime in 1992, in the northern part of the Mogadishu. Around this time, several well-known Somali scholars such as Sheikh Sharif Sharafow, Sheikh Ibrahim Suley and Sheikh Mohamed Moallin Hassan established Sharia courts in an attempt to address the lawlessness that had erupted following the collapse of the state.[17] The first Shari'a courts were started on a very small local neighborhood level by Somali religious leaders as a way to address issues in their communities. Most problems they dealt with were related to petty crimes and family disputes. In the chaotic political context of war torn Mogadishu the religious leaders were considered by most Somalis as some of the only people who could be trusted to impartially resolve disputes. Importantly, the courts also did not take positions on national-political or clan affairs, lending significant credence to their purported impartiality.[2]

At the same time as the creation of the Mogadishu courts, Sheikh Mohamed Haji Yusuf and Sheikh Mohamud A. Nur established a new Islamic court in the Luuq districtofGedo region in 1992. The court had more success than its counterparts in Mogadishu and consequently Luuq district was the safest area in Somalia during much of the 1990s. The court dissolved in 1997 when the Somali National Front and Ethiopian military collaborated to topple it.[17]

The Sheikh Ali-Dhere court

In 1994, the opening of a court in Mogadishu run by a Sheikh named Ali Dheere would have a significant impact on the expansion of the Sharia courts system in the city. Dheere, who lived in one of the most dangerous regions of war-torn Mogadishu, became exhausted with the growing anarchy. He decided to put his religious training to use by setting up the first major Sharia court in Somalia. The infamous "Siisii Street" ran through his community and became notorious for its dangerous reputation.[17]

Siraadka Qiyaama iyo Siisii Allow na mooti (Translation: "Oh god save me from the troubles that are associated with the day of judgement and those of Siisii Street")

— A popular saying in war torn Mogadishu prior to the establishment of Sheikh Ali Dheeres court[17]

Primarily his court focused on aiding merchants and store owners resolve their disputes, helping people arrange legal agreements for large purchases like homes, and trying people for crimes. Local scholars, elders, businessmen and political leaders cooperated with Dheere in a bid to end the spiralling chaos in their community.[17] Soon Ali Dheere had a staff that would apprehend bandits and thieves in the area and bring them to be put on trial. His success in bringing order to his neighborhood in Mogadishu became well known throughout the city and led to the establishment of other copycat Sharia courts.[2]

The court did not shy away from strict punishments and even carried out executions. Soon word began rapidly spreading that law and order was being established in Dheeres sector of the city and the crime rate in the area subsequently dropped dramatically.[17]

Rise of the Mogadishu Islamic Courts

In 1994 and 1995 other Sharia courthouses began opening up in northern Mogadishu, operating independently in their own self contained jurisdictions in the city.[17] Before the establishment of these courts, acts of rape had become commonplace in north Mogadishu since 1991. The establishment of the judiciary made a considerable impact on the security situation as the courts made a point of handing out the capital punishmentofstoning to rapists. By 1997 there had been seven cases of execution by stoning in Somalia. It has been noted that suppression of war time sexual violence was a major underlying factor in Somali women's support for the Islamic Courts.[18]

The first court did not start in southern Mogadishu until 1998, as the de facto ruler of the territory, General Mohammed Farah Aidid and his faction the Somali National Alliance opposed the Islamic courts, and no progress occurred until after Aidids death. Ali Mahdi, Aidids prime rival controlling the northern part of the city, would issue a decree to dismantle Ali Dheere's Court after perceiving the Sheikhs rising popularity as a threat to his own authority. As the years passed, with nothing but warlords offering to replace its authority, the rule of the sharia courts began to cement.[3][19]

By 1999 the multiple Islamic courts had jurisdiction over much of the south of the city as well and five active Sharia courts were operating in the region.[20] The courts were not an organized movement or a government, but represented the closest thing Somalia had to either. Their influence was enhanced by financial donors abroad who sought to bring any semblance of stability to the country.[21] While many Somalis voiced disapproval of the more fundamentalist ways of the original Sharia courts, it was noted that most felt that they were well organized and effective civil administrators.[22]

Consolidation of Islamic Courts

In April 1999, several Sharia courts united for the first time, taking control of Mogadishu's Bakara Market from the local warlords. By the end of the year, their joint efforts had successfully cornered numerous warlords to the outskirts of Mogadishu, although they lacked the resources to completely dominate the city.[2]

By 2000, having liberated a significant portion of the city from warlord control, eleven of these individual Sharia courts amalgamated to establish the Islamic Courts Council. This consolidation led to the unification of their militias into a single combat force. This development marked a pivotal moment in the civil war, as it signified the emergence of the first major non-warlord affiliated Somali force in the city.[23] Professor Mark Fathi Massoud draws a comparison between the Somalis' late 1990s and early 2000s turn towards local religious courts for self-governance and the historical patterns observed in early democratic Western Europe and colonial North America. In both cases, the establishment of courts and the invocation of the divine played crucial roles in state-building. Massoud highlights that the Sharia courts' use of religion to foster stability has parallels with those courts that significantly influenced the nascent phases of democratic states.[2]

When the Transitional National Government of Somalia was established in Djibouti during the spring of 2000 the momentum of the ICU was slowed. It would not return until it was revived in 2004 by Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed who was subsequently elected as chairman of the ICU.[20] The year before in 2003, Sheikh Sharif Ahmed had been a school teacher that had become frustrated with the return of insecurity in north Mogadishu and successfully pushed to rejuvenate the Islamic Courts system in the region.[24]

Military capacity

The ICU did not maintain a significant fighting force as the organization was overwhelmingly focused on providing social services. The deficiency in firepower was especially pronounced in heavy weaponry. According to senior Islamic court officials the union only possessed a total of four technical improvised fighting vehicles when the 2006 Battle of Mogadishu against the Somali warlord alliance broke out.[1]

Rise of the Transitional Federal Government

Following the failure of the Transitional National Government of Somalia established in 2000, the Transitional Federal Government (TFG) led by Abdullahi Yusuf was formed in 2004. Previously aligned closely with Ethiopia, Yusuf's leadership received significant support from the Ethiopian government. This support was believed to be pivotal in his electoral victory for the TFG leadership in an election held in Kenya.[25][26][27] Professor Jude Cocodia, a political science scholar from Niger Delta University, notes that Ethiopia's deep involvement in the formation of the TFG led many Somalis to view the government as inauthentic and essentially a puppet regime under Ethiopian influence. This sentiment was further amplified by historical events, such as the 1982 Border War, during which Yusuf led the Somali Salvation Democratic Front (SSDF) and collaborated with invading Ethiopian forces.[23]

The TFG operated entirely outside of Somalia due to instability in Mogadishu and consequently was criticized by Somali citizens and international community. At the time the TFG was only recognized by Kenya and Ethiopia, as the European Union, the United States and other members of the international community refused to fully recognize the TFG's legitimacy until it operated from Mogadishu. To counter this, the TFG moved into Somalia for the first time in 2005, eventually setting up its headquarters south west of Mogadishu in Baidoa.[28]

ICU, warlords and War on Terror

As the courts started to unify in the early 2000s, tensions escalated with the warlords. Within the framework of the War On Terror, the U.S. government perceived the rise of an Islamic movement in Somalia as a potential terror risk. From 2003 onwards, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) initiated covert operations against the Islamic courts, aiming to depose them from power.[23]

Warlord conflict

Beginning in 2005 Mogadishu was hit by a significant wave of unexplained assassinations and disappearances. The Islamic Courts claimed that covert US government operations and warlords were targeting high ranking ICU officials. According to C. Barnes & H. Hassan, "It was in this context that a military force known as Al-Shabaab (‘the Youth’) emerged, related to but seemingly autonomous of the broad based Courts movement."[24]

At the time it was widely believed in Mogadishu that Somali warlords were cooperating with U.S. intelligence agents to kidnap alleged terror suspects, particularly prominent religious leaders. This atmosphere forced the ICU to take a more confrontational stance against the warlords. Full hostilities between the two parties would break out soon after over the issue of controlling Mogadishu's highly profitable makeshift El Ma’an port. The ICU would enjoy widespread support from Mogadishu citizens and business community against the warlords, greatly aiding its ability to seize and control large swathes of the city.[24] The broad support of Somali women for the union played a significant role in the organizations ability to maintain combat operations against the warlords.[1]

CIA intervention

The Bush administration had become increasingly concerned with the growing power of the Islamic Courts Union, and feared that they would make Somalia a haven for Al-Qaeda to plan attacks from, like in Afghanistan.[29][30] The Americans would go on to approve greater funding for the Somali warlords and further encourage them to counter the ICU, a decision made by top officials in Washington which would be later reaffirmed by the U.S. National Security Council during meeting about Somalia in March 2006.[29][31] At the time of the meeting there was fierce fighting in between the warlords and the Islamic Courts around Mogadishu, and the decision was taken to make counter-terrorism the top policy priority for Somalia.[30] According to a report by Ted Dagne, an Africa Research Specialist for the Congressional Research Service,

"...the leadership [of the ICU] was often referred to as jihadist, extremist, and at times terrorist by some observers without much evidence to support the allegations. For example, the assessment of the Islamic Courts by U.S. officials was that less than 5% of the Islamic Courts leadership can be considered extremist, according to a senior State Department official."[1]

At the suggestion of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), anti-ICU warlords united under the banner of the Alliance for the Restoration of Peace and Counter-Terrorism (ARPCT)[32] and according by the International Crisis Group, had a notorious pattern of seizing innocent clerics with little or no intelligence value, which greatly fed into the already existing perception among Somalis that the Americans and the warlords were waging a war against Islam under the guise of the War on Terrorism.[33][1] According to Mary Harper, a journalist with BBC Africa, the Islamic Courts Union was in reality more of a loose federation and only began to unite into a homogeneous body with a clear authority when its existence was threatened by the ARPCT. The Transitional Federal Government of Somalia, being both in contention with the ICU and backed by the United States, openly opposed the Americans operation to fund the warlords.[6] Despite significant opposition in the government, several members of the CIA backed warlord alliance were holding senior posts within the TFG while fighting against the ICU was ongoing.[1] Nine of Mogadishu's most prominent community leaders that opposed the ICU claim they secretly flew to neighboring Djibouti in early March 2006 and pleaded with U.S. military officials there to stop funding the warlords who were devastating the city. They allege that they warned the Americans that backing the hated warlords would end up greatly empowering the Islamic Courts and inflame the radical elements within it.[33]

We would prefer that the U.S. work with the transitional government and not with criminals. This is a dangerous game. Somalia is not a stable place and we want the U.S. in Somalia. But in a more constructive way. Clearly we have a common objective to stabilize Somalia, but the U.S. is using the wrong channels.

— Prime Minister of Transitional Federal Government, Ali Mohamed Gedi, in an interview with NBC[29]

American support for the warlords extended to the point where, on numerous occasions, Nairobi-based CIA officers would land on warlord-controlled airstrips in Mogadishu with large amounts of money for distribution to Somali militias.[6] According to John Prendergast, CIA-operated flights into Somalia had been bringing in $100,000 to US$150,000 per month for the warlords and he further claimed that the flights would remain in Somalia for the day so that CIA agents can confer with them.[30] The CIA also gave its newfound allies surveillance equipment for "tracking al Qaeda suspects".[30]AUnited Nations report on violations of the international arms embargo on Somalia claimed that the Ethiopian government had armed warlord Mohamed Dheere to fight the ICU.[34] According to multiple U.S. officials, the decision to use of the warlords as proxies was born from fears of once again committing large numbers of American soldiers to Somalia following the disastrous 1993 Battle of Mogadishu.[6] Many of the warlords the Americans would fund to fight the Islamic Courts Union were many of the same ones that had fought directly against the Americans in Mogadishu during UNOSOM II in 1993.[29]

By April 2006 much of Mogadishu had fallen under the control of the ICU after clashes with the warlord alliance. The cities air and seaports came under the organizations direct control for the first time. In May they would seize the very building where the warlord alliance had been founded and established an Islamic Court in its place.[24]

Defeat of the warlord alliance and seizure of Mogadishu

On 5 June 2006, the Islamic Courts Union decisively defeated the warlord alliance in the Second Battle of Mogadishu, gained total authority over the capital and proceeded to establish a 65-mile radius of control around the city. This was a seminal moment in modern Somali history, as the ICU was now the first group to have consolidated control over all of Mogadishu since the collapse of the Somali state.[10] According to Chatham House, "The Courts achieved the unthinkable, uniting Mogadishu for the first time in 16 years, and re-establishing peace and security".[35]

The Union of Islamic Courts was established to ensure that Somali people suffering for 15 years would gain peace and full justice and freedom from the anarchic rule of warlords who refuted their people to no direction.

— An interview featured in the BBC Online Somali section in June 2006 with Sharif Sheikh Ahmed

The Alliance for the Restoration of Peace and Counter-Terrorism soon collapsed, with the majority of its commanders publicly resigning or expressing support for the ICU.[25] Two of the defeated warlords allegedly fled to an American naval vessel off the Somali coast according to witnesses in Mogadishu.[33][25] BBC News reported that the ICU had emerged as Somalia's strongest and most popular faction.[2] The leaders of the ICU repeatedly professed that they intended to negotiate with the TFG so that it could move into Mogadishu and reunite Somalia.[7]

Rule over Mogadishu and southern Somalia (June – December 2006)

Over the ensuing months, the Islamic Courts initiated a drive to establish stability in Mogadishu and the territories under its control. This period of the Somali Civil War, referred to as a 'Golden era' of Somali politics by top UN officials, saw the ICU undertake significant reformative and security measures.[36][37]

In this time frame, the ICU revived sixteen previously dormant police stations in Mogadishu, deploying nearly 600 personnel and dozens of vehicles to fortify the nascent law enforcement framework. Additionally, the city witnessed a ban on the open possession of firearms unless registered with a court, and foreign visitors were publicly advised to provide two weeks' prior notice of their arrival for their security.[37] The courts also reportedly began issuing travel visas, resulting in significant influx of investors and former refugees.[38] Another action that significantly increased the ICU's popularity was the restoration of proper ownership regarding land and homes that had been lost or stolen during the civil war.[28] It was noted that as the courts were taking over the city many people simply left the homes they occupied before the rightful owners had even taken their cases to the specialized Sharia courts that were setup for property disputes.[17][24] During this period the ICU also began to expand its authority by validating major transactions such as the purchase of vehicles or homes and overseeing marriages and divorces.[39]

The formation of a sanitation committee and the organization of a substantial clean-up campaign on 20 July 2006 resulted in the first clearing of war debris and rubbish from Mogadishu's streets in over a decade.[40] This successful initiative was further expanded to regions surrounding the capital.[37] Mogadishu International Airport, which had been closed since the withdrawal of UNOSOM II forces in 1995, was reopened by the courts on 15 July 2006.[41] On the 25 August the courts also reopened the historic seaport, which had been one of the busiest in ports in all of East Africa.[42]

Prof. Ibrahim Hassan Addou, (beside a logo used by the ICU) appointed head of the Foreign Affairs department for the union. He had previously worked as an administrator at the American UniversityinWashington, D.C., before returning to Somalia in 1999.

During the ICU's brief control of southern Somalia, the organization made numerous declarations condemning discrimination against what the courts considered to be "oppressed clans" (e.g., Yibir, Jareer and Madhibaan) as un-Islamic and haram. The courts deliberately orchestrated marriages between women from discriminated groups to men from larger Somali clans in order to challenge popular perceptions.[17]

The ICU would go on to create a coast guard and pirate activity completely ceased due to aggressive anti-piracy operations they conducted. According to courts officials, the organization was sending large contingents of troops into the central Somali regions to crack down on pirate operations based there. In one notable incident, ICU forces would storm a hijacked United Arab Emirates registered ship, and recaptured it after a battle with the pirates aboard the vessel.[43][44]

ICU offensive, deployment of Ethiopian troops

Advance of the Islamic Courts offensive

With its newfound position of authority, the ICU seized on its popularity and began pushing deep into the regions surrounding the city for the first time. Their offensive capability was greatly aided by new weaponry it had captured from the warlords – most of which had been bought with U.S. funds.[33] During the summer of 2006, the ICU was allegedly being given support by Eritrea, Djibouti, Iran, Libya, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Syria.[45][46]

First deployment of Ethiopian forces

On 17 June, local Somali officials and residents in Gedo region reported about 50 Ethiopian armored vehicles had passed through the border town of Dolow and pushed 50 km inland near the town of Luuq.[26][47]

ICU head Sheik Sharif Sheik Ahmed would claim that 300 Ethiopian troops had entered the country through the border town of DolowinGedo region that morning in support of the TFG, and that Ethiopian forces had also been probing Somali border towns. He would go on to threaten to fight Ethiopian troops if they continued intervening and further stated, “We want the whole world to know what’s going on. The United States is encouraging Ethiopia to take over the area. Ethiopia has crossed our borders and are heading for us.”[48][47] The Ethiopian government would deny the deployment of its forces in Somalia and countered that the ICU was marching towards its borders.[49][34][26] The TFG would deny accusations of an Ethiopian military deployment counter claiming that ICU was fabricating a pretext to assault its capital in Baidoa.[27]

On June 24, Hassan Dahir Aweys would be named head of the ICUs newly formed 88 member parliament, the Council of the Islamic Courts.[50]

Khartoum ICU/TFG talks

First Khartoum meeting (June 2006)

The TFG, overshadowed by the recent achievements of the ICU, was in dire need of the popularity and military capacity of the courts and the ICU in turn was in dire need of international recognition along with the political and administrative skills required to run a government that the TFG possessed. The obvious deficiencies of both organizations led many to perceive a possible complimentary ICU/TFG amalgamation. In light of this, the Arab League arranged a conference between the ICU and TFG in June 2006 to discuss merger proposals in Khartoum, Sudan. The talk initially began positively but rapidly collapsed over the issue of Ethiopian forces deployed to Somalia at the request of the TFG. The ICU insisted that the presence of Ethiopian forces was the priority and should be dealt with first, while the TFG insisted that an agreement on a unified government had to be made before removing the Ethiopian presence. Neither side was willing to compromise on the issue of Ethiopian troops, leading to the collapse of the talks. On 22 June 2006 a communique was issued announcing that both parties recognized each other's legitimacy and that neither would engage in hostile propaganda against the other.[28]

Both parties agreed to renew talks and meet again on 17 July 2006.[28]

Second Khartoum meeting (September 2006)

The TFG was alarmed by the rapid territorial expansion of the ICU and feared that it was attempting to encircle its capital in Baidoa. Neither party was willing to go to Khartoum for the second planned conference. The TFG insisted that the ICU withdraw to the territory it had occupied during the June conference, while the ICU demanded the withdrawal of Ethiopian military contingents in Somalia before discussions resumed. The two primary mediators, the Arab League and the Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD) were both viewed as biased by the ICU and TFG. The ICU accused the IGAD of being partial to the TFG, while the TFG accused the Arab League of complicity with the ICU.[28]

The ICU continued to gain territory around Baidoa and lacking any troops of its own the TFG requested foreign support. On 20 July 2006 Ethiopia deployed hundreds of troops to Baidoa. This prompted an immediate warning from Sheik Sharif Sheik Ahmed that the organization would invoke a jihad against Ethiopian forces if they did not withdraw.[51] Numerous Somali witnesses and a BBC correspondent reported seeing Ethiopian Army trucks and hundreds of soldiers crossing the border and entering Baidoa.[52][53] The TFG would publicly deny the existence of Ethiopian forces in Baidoa and argued the claims were ICU propaganda. TFG minister of information Mohammed Abdi Hayir, claimed that sightings of Ethiopian forces in Somalia were a result of confused identity as Ethiopia had merely provided 4,000 uniforms to TFG forces. Ethiopian minister of information, Berhan Hailu announced soon after the deployment, “We will use all means at our disposal to crush the Islamist group if they attempt to attack Baidoa, the seat of the Transitional Federal Government.”[25][52]

Eventually talks did resume, but in September instead of July 2006. Negotiations quickly broke down over the issues of Ethiopian forces and ICU expansion. According to former Somali diplomat and writer Ismail Ali Ismail, the failure of the second Khartoum talks stemmed from incompetent mediation, as he argues that the roadblock could have been resolved if the mediators had suggested and pushed for a simultaneous withdrawal of both ICU and Ethiopian forces under international supervision.[28]

Baidoa Suicide Bombing and capture of Kismayo

On 18 September 2006 the first suicide bombing in Somali history occurred in the TFG capital of Baidoa, when a truck loaded with explosives attempted to assassinate President Abdullahi Yusuf. Previous attacks on the TFG had been blamed on warlords, but the government would for the first time accuse radical elements within the ICU of the attack. The ICU would deny responsibility for the assassination attempt, instead pinning the blame on Ethiopian provocateurs.[28] According to Professor Robert Pape of the University of Chicago, the decision to invite Ethiopian troops to invade Somalia created an ideal trigger for extremists to carry out Somalia's first ever suicide attack, as the deployment of foreign troops loyal to the Christian-dominated government in Ethiopia was viewed by the majority of ordinary Somali citizens as a threat to the nations sovereignty.[54]

On 25 September the ICU would seize the strategic port city of Kismayo, which the TFG claimed breached the ceasefire deal signed between the two parties in Khartoum.[55]

Criticism and allegations

Despite its significant achievements, the ICU would attract criticism for many of its actions.

Extremist elements in ICU, who viewed the TFG as an Ethiopian puppet, would engage in assassinations of TFG personnel.[28]

Somalia's only popular drug, Khat, was outright banned. During the civil war many Somalis had relied the selling and distribution of the drug as one of their sole sources of income and consequently the ban had serious repercussions on people's ability to afford basic necessities. Charcoal exports were banned, on account of the industry devastating Somalia's fragile environment. Once again many Somalis had relied on the practice to make ends meet.[3] Many Somali citizens also criticized the courts for handing punishments out to petty criminals far more frequently than powerful gangsters and warlords.[17]

There was serious ideological friction between the ‘moderate’ wing of the Islamic Courts led by the Chairman of the Islamic Courts’ "Executive Council", Sheikh Sharif, and the "radical" wing led by the Chairman of the Courts’ Shura (Consultative or Legislative Council), Sheikh Aweys. These ideological divisions became clear when various wings of the Islamic Courts started making policies and statements without reference to the collective leadership. Many of them – mostly "radically" conservative social policies – were not popular among the wider population.[20]

The ICU was accused of enacting extremist policies such as banning television, shutting down cinemas and preventing women from working. A Congressional Research Service report on Somalia investigating the allegations would find no evidence to support to the assertion that women had ever been banned from working by the Islamic Courts. It was further revealed in interviews with local residents and courts officials that there had been some prohibitions on watching soccer games on television late at night, but merely due to disturbances and fighting. Cinemas had also been restricted, though only in the mornings at the direct request of Mogadishu parents who were frustrated with the issue of children skipping school to see films.[1]

Ethiopian invasion and downfall

To avoid turning Mogadishu into a warzone once again, the ICU withdrew from the city on December 26, 2006.[56]

The top leaders of the Islamic Courts Union, including Sheikh Hassan Dahir Aweys, Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed and Sheikh Abdirahman Janaqow, resigned the next day.[56]

On January 1, 2007, the ICU would abandon its last urban stronghold in the city of Kismayo, far south of Mogadishu and the remaining leadership would flee to Eritrea.[3]

Following the Ethiopian invasion and subsequent occupation, the Islamic Courts Union disbanded and Somalia once again began slipping into a state of chaos. Between 2007 and 2008 approximately two-thirds of Mogadishu's residents would be forced to flee the growing violence in the city, and Somalia began to experience one of the worst humanitarian crises in its history.[3]

Somalia after the ICU

The Islamic Courts Union had actively fought pirate activity on the Somali coast, and consequently piracy would thrive in their wake.[57]

Under the Courts, there was literally no piracy.

— Hans Tino Hansen, CEO of Risk Intelligence, a Danish maritime security consultant[44]

Rise of Al-Shabaab and conflict with ICU remnants

Al-Shabaab, an obscure organization at this point, would gain immense popularity as a resistance group fighting against the Ethiopians. Consequently, much of Somalia south of Mogadishu would become Al Shabaab ruled territory.[3]

Despite the general collapse of the organization in early 2007, remnants of the ICU survived and controlled parcels of territory in Somalia for years following.[58] These regions would operate independently of Al-Shabaab and the two groups would often come into contention. Al-Shabaab spokesman Mukhtar Robow would publicly deny conflict between the two groups and claimed that although there had been past differences, both factions cooperated on the grounds opposing an Ethiopian military presence.[59] In January 2009, fighters who claimed loyalty to Islamic Courts Union would engage in a large military confrontation in Balad, Middle Shabeelle, against Al-Shabaab resulting in several deaths. Al-Shabaab would put out a statement announcing that it was saddened by the hostilities.[60]

Creation of the ARS party and merger with TFG

In September 2007 the successor to the Islamic Courts Union, the Alliance for the Re-Liberation of Somalia (ARS), was founded by numerous high ranking ICU officials who had south refuge in Eritrea. Sheikh Sharif Ahmed would be elected head of the organization and promptly declared war on Ethiopian forces. The ARS further announced its refusal to hold talks with the TFG until an Ethiopian withdrawal.[61]

In June 2008 the ARS and TFG would sign a peace accord agreeing to the cessation of all hostilities between the two parties. Though successful, the talks were once again threatened by the issue of Ethiopian military forces deployed in Somalia.[62]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Somalia: Current Conditions and Prospects for a Lasting Peace (PDF). Congressional Research Service. 2011. pp. 18–22.
  • ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Fathi., Massoud, Mark (2021). Shari'a, Inshallah. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-108-96598-9. OCLC 1295275479.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • ^ a b c d e f g h Harper, Mary (2012). Getting Somalia Wrong?: Faith, War and Hope in a Shattered State (African Arguments). Zed Books. OCLC 940704916.
  • ^ "The Islamic Courts Union". Harvard Divinity School. Archived from the original on 4 August 2020. Retrieved 30 September 2020.
  • ^ Shephard, Michelle (2017-03-10). "My meeting with a forgotten terrorist in Somalia". The Toronto Star. ISSN 0319-0781. Retrieved 2022-04-13.
  • ^ a b c d "Efforts by C.I.A. Fail in Somalia, Officials Charge". New York Times. 8 June 2006.
  • ^ a b "Guns finally silent in Somalia's capital". NBC News. 2006-06-17. Retrieved 2023-06-02.
  • ^ "Somalia Mourns a 'Golden Era' as Crisis Worsens | Africa Faith and Justice Network". afjn.org. Retrieved 2021-09-04.
  • ^ "Somalia's High Stakes Power Struggle". Council on Foreign Relations. 3 Aug 2006.
  • ^ a b "Islamic Militia Seizes Somalia's Capital - Forbes.com". Forbes. 2006-06-14. Archived from the original on 14 June 2006. Retrieved 2022-04-12.
  • ^ "US backs Ethiopian attacks in Somalia". Sudan Tribune. 26 December 2006.
  • ^ Mazzetti, Mark (2006-12-27). "U.S. Signals Backing for Ethiopian Incursion Into Somalia". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2022-11-03.
  • ^ "How US forged an alliance with Ethiopia over invasion". the Guardian. 2007-01-13. Retrieved 2022-04-11.
  • ^ "WikiLeaks Reveals U.S. Twisted Ethiopia's Arm to Invade Somalia - FPIF". Foreign Policy In Focus. 2010-12-08. Retrieved 2022-04-11.
  • ^ CHERIAN, JOHN. "Bush war in Africa". Frontline. Retrieved 2022-04-11.
  • ^ "Ethiopia reaps U.S. aid by enlisting in war on terror and hiring influential lobbyists - ICIJ". 2007-05-22. Retrieved 2022-11-03.
  • ^ a b c d e f g h i j Abdi, Elmi, Afyare (2010). Understanding the Somalia Conflagration : Identity, Islam and Peacebuilding. Pluto Press. ISBN 978-0-7453-2974-1. OCLC 847450809.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • ^ Abdulle., Alasow, Omar (2010). Violations of the rules applicable in non-international armed conflicts and their possible causes : the case of Somalia. Martinus Nijhoff Publishers. ISBN 978-90-04-16475-8. OCLC 960206270.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • ^ Tughral, Yamin (2019). UN peacekeeping operations in Somalia 1992-1995 : The Pakistani Perspective. Paramount Books. pp. 43–44. ISBN 978-969-637-522-7. OCLC 1101424680.
  • ^ a b c Barnes, Cedric; Harun, Hassan (24 July 2007). "The Rise and Fall of Mogadishu's Islamic Courts". Journal of Eastern African Studies. 1 (2): 151–160. doi:10.1080/17531050701452382. S2CID 154453168. Retrieved 30 September 2020.
  • ^ "Somalia's High Stakes Power Struggle". Council on Foreign Relations. Retrieved 2018-10-24.
  • ^ "Wall Street, Somalia, and Jack Sparrow". HuffPost. 2009-03-06. Retrieved 2022-04-13.
  • ^ a b c Cocodia, Jude (2021-04-03). "Rejecting African Solutions to African Problems: The African Union and the Islamic Courts Union in Somalia". African Security. 14 (2): 110–131. doi:10.1080/19392206.2021.1922026. ISSN 1939-2206.
  • ^ a b c d e Barnes, Cedric; Hassan, Harun (2007). "The Rise and Fall of Mogadishu's Islamic Courts". Journal of Eastern African Studies. 1 (2): 151–160. doi:10.1080/17531050701452382. ISSN 1753-1055. S2CID 154453168.
  • ^ a b c d "Ethiopian troops enter Somalia". www.aljazeera.com. Retrieved 2022-11-12.
  • ^ a b c "Ethiopian troops cross border into Somalia". Times of Malta. Retrieved 2022-11-13.
  • ^ a b "Somalia gov't says Islamists plan to attack base - Somalia | ReliefWeb". reliefweb.int. Retrieved 2022-11-13.
  • ^ a b c d e f g h Ismail Ali Ismail (2010). Governance: The Scourge and Hope of Somalia. [Bloomington, IN]: Trafford Pub. pp. 365–396. ISBN 978-1-4269-1980-0. OCLC 620115177.
  • ^ a b c d "U.S. secretly backing warlords in Somalia". NBC News. Retrieved 2022-04-12.
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  • ^ "U.S. Accused of Backing Warlords in Somalia". Los Angeles Times. 2006-05-19. Retrieved 2022-04-12.
  • ^ Maruf, Harun (2018). Inside al-Shabaab : the secret history of al-Qaeda's most powerful ally. Dan Joseph. Bloomington, Indiana. p. 35. ISBN 978-0-253-03751-0. OCLC 1043065645.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • ^ a b c d "Somali leaders say U.S. ignored pleas | The Spokesman-Review". www.spokesman.com. Retrieved 2022-04-12.
  • ^ a b "Ethiopia troops crossing into Somalia-top Islamist". One India. 17 June 2006.
  • ^ "How Al Shabaab was born". Guardian. 4 October 2013.
  • ^ Gettleman, Jeffrey (2007-11-20). "As Somali Crisis Swells, Experts See a Void in Aid". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2021-09-04.
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  • ^ Axe, David. "Somalia: Better Off under Islamic Courts?". Wired. ISSN 1059-1028. Retrieved 2023-07-31.
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  • ^ Maliti, Tom (17 Oct 2007). "Piracy Off Somalia's Coast Increases". www.hiiraan.com. Hiiraan Online. Associated Press. Retrieved 7 Jun 2023.
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  • ^ "U.N. Report Ties Somali Islamists to Hezbollah". NPR.org. Retrieved 2022-04-13.
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  • ^ "Ethiopian troops enter Somalia – Islamic leader". Sudan Tribune.
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  • ^ "Ethiopian troops on Somali soil". 2006-07-20. Retrieved 2022-11-13.
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  • ^ "Ethiopian Troops Hunt Islamic Courts Rebels in Central Region". Hiiraan Online. 9 November 2007.
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  • Bibliography

    Further reading


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Islamic_Courts_Union&oldid=1175834614"

    Categories: 
    Factions in the Somali Civil War
    Islamic organizations in Africa
    Law of Somalia
    1990s establishments in Somalia
    Islam in Somalia
    Islamic courts and tribunals
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