Appeal for Somalis to return home
(Mogadishu,
Dec
21, 2009 Ceegaag Online)
Mukhtar Ainashe, a
presidential adviser on security, gave up a well-paying job
in the US to return to Somalia.
Mukhtar Ainashe gave it all up: a consulting job for the
US government worth US$10,000 (Dh36,700) per month; the
comfortable home in the suburbs of the US capital.
He even put a hold on raising his two children and working
on his PhD so that he could come here and help clean up the
disaster in his native Somalia.
“I gave up my job because this country is in a mess and
there are millions of people who have no hope and no future
unless something’s done,” said Mr Ainashe, 41, a
presidential adviser on security. “I’m hoping I can somehow
or another make a positive contribution to that effort.
That’s why I’m here facing the bullets every day.”
And there are bullets every day. Just outside Mr Ainashe’s
window, the distinct “pop, pop, pop” of gunfire can be heard
as Islamist militants battle government soldiers on the
streets of Mogadishu, Somalia’s besieged, crumbling seaside
capital.
After nearly two decades of constant war, about three
million Somalis have left the country. Hundreds of thousands
of middle-class, educated Somalis are living in the United
States, Canada, northern Europe and the UAE.
Large Somali population centres include Minneapolis,
Washington, Ottawa, London, Oslo and Dubai. Somali-owned
businesses line the streets of the Deira area of Dubai and
Somalis own three Dubai-based airlines offering direct
flights from the UAE to Mogadishu.
Doctors, lawyers, professors and other skilled
professionals have joined the Somali diaspora, adding to a
so-called brain drain on the country.
But in the past year, there has been an effort by young
professional Somalis such as Mr Ainashe to return to their
homeland and help the fledgling government build a viable
state.
Ahmedou Ould-Abdallah, the UN special representative for
Somalia, has been working closely with the Somali diaspora
to get them involved in their own nation building.
“My wish is that the diaspora work hard to remove the
name of Somalia from anything negative,” he said in an
interview. “It is important that there is a basic consensus
to agree on a place that they can call home, a place they
are proud of.”
About half of the 39 cabinet ministers in Somalia’s
government are from the diaspora as are at least 100 members
of parliament and dozens of mid-level bureaucrats trying to
establish the first real government in 19 years.
Omar Abdirashid Ali Sharmarke, a Canadian citizen, had a
comfortable life in Ottawa and Washington before returning
to Mogadishu to lead the government as prime minister. His
appointment to the post in February was seen as a way to
appease members of the diaspora, who keep a close eye on
politics back home.
“I was born and bred here,” he said in an interview from the
heavily fortified government headquarters. “This is actually
my home. I’m glad that I was in Canada. I’m glad that I was
exposed to political democracy, multi-party systems and also
had an educational background from western countries.
“That, combined with my social background, will help move
the dialogue forward.”
Mr Sharmarke said the diaspora is the key to rebuilding
Somalia, if its members are groomed by the right side.
“The diaspora is an added value to our country,” he said.
“We are working with the international community to
influence our diaspora before they are recruited into such
extremism.”
Just as overseas Somalis are returning to join the
government, diaspora members are coming back to fight
alongside Islamist rebels trying to overthrow the
government.
The US Federal Bureau of Investigation has investigated a
case of about 20 Somalis from the US state of Minnesota, who
turned up in a training camp for al Shabab, a Somali
extremist group with ties to al Qa’eda.
Dozens more young Somali men from the United Kingdom,
Australia and Sweden have come back to Somalia to fight for
al Shabab.
Investigators worry that they could return to their adopted
countries and launch an attack.
“The diaspora could also be a source of problems, funding
violence or misbehaving in host countries,” Mr Ould-Abdallah
said. “If the youth make mistakes, it is the leaders who
have not provided examples.”
One of the suicide bombers in an attack that killed 30 in
northern Somalia last year was from Minnesota, and one of
the bombers who killed 21 at an African Union base in
Mogadishu in September was from the state of Washington. The
bomber who killed 22 people at a graduation ceremony in
Mogadishu this month was from Denmark.
Still, the majority of Somalis are returning to Somalia
to rebuild rather than to destroy.
Abdullahi Mohamed Jimale Barre, a prominent Somali lawyer,
was living in Uganda when he got a call from Sheikh Sharif
Sheikh Ahmed, Somalia’s president. Within days, he was on a
plane for Mogadishu to run the country’s judiciary as
attorney general.
“I want to write the history of my country,” he said. “My
country needs me.”
Mr Ainashe, who lived in Norway for most of his 20s and
30s, recently moved to Washington, where he was working on
his PhD in education policy at George Washington University
and raising two daughters under five.
For the past six months, he has been living in Mogadishu in
a small bedroom he shares with three other government
officials.
The bedroom also serves as his office. He rests his laptop
on a chair and sits on his bed to work. He hangs his clothes
on a coat rack. Above his bed sits a stack of books,
including a biography of Che Guevara and a book called
Journey of the Jihadist: Inside the Muslim Militancy.
His room is in the guest wing of the presidential villa.
Henry Kissinger and Idi Amin have both stayed in the room
next door. Instead of thousands of dollars per month, Mr
Ainashe now works for $600, which usually never appears. He
is more or less a volunteer.
Mr Ainashe encourages other Somalis abroad to come back and
join the effort to help the Somalis who are still here.
“Politicians always talk about the little guy, the regular
folks,” he said. “I’m doing this for the regular folks in
Somalia.
“I have a life. I can travel tomorrow with an aircraft
and go to Washington and forget about all this. But they
actually have to live here in Mogadishu. They have nowhere
else to go. If you see how they live, it gets you
emotionally. You say hey, maybe living like this is not so
bad after all. That’s where I get the motivation to keep
working.”
mbrown@thenational.ae
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