THE PARTITION OF SOMALIA – 1875 To 2012
Sunday April 15, 2012 - 14:52:35
1875 – Egypt occupies towns on Somali coast and parts of the interior. 1860s- France acquires a foothold on the Somali coast later becoming Djibouti 1887- Britain proclaims „protectorate? over Somaliland 1888- Anglo-French agreement defines boundary between Somali colonial possessions of the two countrie 1889- Italy sets up a „protectorate? in central Somalia, later consolidated with territory in the south ceded by the Sultan of Zanzibar 1925 ? Territory east of the Jubba River detached from Kenya to become the westernmost part of the Italian „protectorate? 1936- Italian Somaliland combined with Somali-speaking parts of Ethiopia to form a province of Italian East Africa 1940- Italians occupy British Somaliland 1941- British occupy Italian Somaliland 1950- Italian Somaliland becomes a UN trust territory under Italian control 1956- Italian Somaliland remained Somalia and granted internal autonomy 1960- British and Italian parts of Somaliaclaimindepedence, merge and form the United Republic of Somalia 1969-1991- Drought and War 1991 – Somaliand breaks away 1995- UN Peacekeepers leave having failed in their mission 1998- Puntland declares autonomy 2004- 14thattempt to install a central government since 1991 in Kenya 2004- Tsunami hits Somalia killing hundreds of Somalis and displacing tens of thousands of people 2005- Somali parliament returns to Mogadishu from Kenya 2006- Islamists Advance and take control of the capital 2006- TFG and ICU in peace talks from Khartoum, Sudan 2006- Ethiopian deploys 100,000 troops to occupy Mogadishu 2006- UN Security Council resolution endorses African peacekeepers specifying that neighboring states should not deploy their forces to Somalia 2006- African Union and Arab League urge Ethiopia to pull its troops out of Somalia; UN Security Council cannot agree on statement calling for foreign troops to pull out of Somalia 2007- On going air strikes conducted in southern Somalia targeting radical foreign insurgent elements 2007- UN Security Council authorizes a six month African Union peacekeeping mission for Somalia 2007- Ethiopian Premier Meles Zenawi visits Mogadishu pledging to withdraw his troops once peace takes hold 2007- Opposition groups form a newalliancein Asmara, Eritrea 2007- Ethiopian forces fire on demonstrators in Mogadishu protesting foreign invaders 2008- Burundi deploys 440 troops to Somalia 2008- EU calls for international effort to tackle piracy 2008- Ethiopia?s Meles Zenawi says he will keep Ethiopian troops in Somalia until jihadists are defeated 2008- UN Security Council unanimously votes to allow countries to send warships into Somalia?s territorial waters to tackle piracy 2009- Djibouti conference between TFG and Alliance for the Re-liberation of Somalia elects moderate Islamist as president 2009- Al Shabbab declares allegiance to Osama bin Laden 2010- Up to half of the internationalfoodaid being diverted to corrupt contractors, militants and local UN staff during one of the worst humanitarian crises in recent memory 2011- Kenya intervenes in southern Somalia 2011- France intervenes in southern Somalia 2011- Ethiopian troops return to Somalia 2011- On-going UAV airstrikes continue in Somalia 2011- Djibouti deploys 800 troops to Somalia 2012- UK Foreign Office announces the ?London Conference on Somalia? to seek agreement on what the international community believes should succeed the transitional institutions in Mogadishu in August 2012 and to establish a foreign JointFinancialManagement Board As former colonial powers and continental newcomers divine uniquely selfish strategies for carving up a noble and fiercely nationalistic culture and the furtherance of informal imperialism of control through military intervention and economic dominance afforded by international donors, a word of caution is advised. The Somalis have for decades endured internal division, external manipulation, famine, regional encroachment, colonial rivalry, Islamists, jihadists, peacekeepers, occupiers, trustees, pirates, warlords, embargoes and the list goes on. Little wonder a nation stirred into political chaos for over a century by the British, French, Italians, Ethiopians, Eritreans, Kenyans, Djiboutians, Ugandans,Turks, Egyptians, Saudis, Iranians, Chinese, Russians have found peace illusive and economic prosperity out of reach. The time has come to give the Somali people long overdue political space, free from outside urgings and influences, to find an organic level at which to take a breath and begin the important work of sorting their own affairs, region by region, with respectful distance and the requisite resources to accomplish internal stability. The embers of Somali nationalist are glowing. With the appropriate level of indigenous encouragement, Somalia will rise like phoenix from the ashes of civil war, starvation and loss. To each and every Somali brother and sister these words reach, it?s time to take the nation back. Soomaliyeey Toosoo! |