Reuters
Friday, April 06, 2012
Running her small
business and bringing up six children in a part of rubble-strewn
Mogadishu known as 'Kilometre Five', Safia Omar said a bombing of
Somalia's national theatre had robbed her country of a brief sense that
things were getting better.
The bombing - which targeted
the prime minister - killed at least six people including two of
Somalia's top sports officials after a young female suicide bomber
walked into the theatre and blew herself up. Islamist militant group al
Shabaab claimed the attack.
"Our
hopes for peace faded with yesterday's blast," Omar, the owner of a
kiosk, told Reuters. She said she doubted there would be any stability
for as long as President Sheikh Sharif Ahmed, a former Islamist
commander, remained at the helm of the lawless nation.
"Whenever we get a sniff of peace, explosions take place, wiping out any new-found sense of pleasure," she said.
"Al Shabaab are hated and they are weak, but these officials are sustaining the violence."
The
theatre had only reopened its doors for the first time in 20 years in
mid March, an event which it had been hoped marked a new chapter in
Somalia's history. Instead the attack underscored how fragile any
progress is.
Although the
authorities have made tangible security gains since the al Qaeda-allied
militants pulled out of Mogadishu, the Somali capital, in August the
attack showed al Shabaab could return and strike at will.
Speaking
at the bomb-damaged theatre, the president said the group's increasing
recourse to suicide attacks was a sign of their growing weakness.
Construction
sites are mushrooming across the coastal city, cafes are opening, and
markets stay open longer into the evening, sometimes under street
lights.
But confidence and trust in
Ahmed and his United Nations-backed interim government are in short
supply on the city's rubble-strewn streets, where most buildings carry
the mortar-pocked scars of two decades of civil strife.
Although
on the back foot, the rebels are the most powerful of an array of
militias spawned by the conflict in Somalia, where armed groups and
those with political clout have a history of wrecking attempted
settlements and perpetuating instability and famine.
PROMISES FALL ON DEAF EARS
One
reason for the lack of political progress is that war and instability
are lucrative. Somalia's power brokers, pirate kingpins and business
tycoons are reluctant to give up the status quo.
Analysts say many players in Somalia's turmoil find that by sabotaging reform they can continue to reap the spoils of war.
Al Shabaab pulled its fighters out of Mogadishu in August under military pressure from an African Union (AU) force.
While
Wednesday's blast demonstrated the militants' continued ability to
strike at the heart of the city and government, counter-terrorism
experts say they are in a weaker position now than at any other time
during their insurgency.
But
diplomats worry political reform is not keeping pace with the
hard-fought military gains earned in the capital and the south of the
country by Kenyan and Ethiopian troops.
For
ordinary Somalis, their government's failure to quash al Shabaab's five
year insurgency and put an end to widespread corruption and infighting
is a painful source of despair.
"I
believe the blasts will continue unabated. The government has failed to
secure the capital, let alone the entire country," said 22 year-old
nursing student Rage Abdullahi.
President Ahmed promised to "redouble our efforts and tighten security" but his rhetoric appeared to have fallen on deaf ears.
"President Sharif has just been making empty promises since he was elected three years ago," Abdullahi said.
On
Thursday, the AU's AMISOM force deployed 100 soldiers to Baidoa, the
country's third biggest city and a former rebel stronghold in the south
that served as a key recruitment and training centre until it fell to
Ethiopian forces in February.
It is
the first time AMISOM has deployed beyond the outskirts of Mogadishu
since the force was launched in early 2007 and marks the first of a
series of phases to expand AMISOM operations into new areas of southern
and central Somalia.
"(Al Shabaab)
are losing ground and losing friends all over Somalia," AMISOM's deputy
force commander Brigadier-General Audace Nduwumunsi said in a statement.
A total of 2,500 Ugandan and Burundian troops will eventually be based in Baidoa, 250 km northwest of Mogadishu.
The
African Union says Ethiopia will pull its military out of Somalia this
month. AMISOM's increased area of operations comes after the United
Nations voted in February to expand the force by almost half to more
than 17,700 soldiers.