Turkey’s promise to send arms to Somalia draws criticism
Somalia’s opposition has
urged Ankara not to send a shipment of weapons to a special police unit because
they fear that Somali president could use them for “rigging” the approaching
national elections. The call has put Turkey’s engagement in a country torn
apart by civil war for decades under the spotlight.
Opposition candidates wrote
to Turkey’s ambassador in Somalia and expressed their concern about these
weapons coming into the country in such a “sensitive election period.”
Turkey trained Harama’ad
police, a special Somali unit that is known for its violent suppression of
peaceful protests in the Horn of Africa country.
On Dec. 15, four protesters
were wounded in Mogadishu during a peaceful protest when the troops opened fire
on them, while two others were arrested. The Council of Presidential Candidates
condemned the use of live bullets by the Harama’ad forces against Somali
people.
Ankara is planning to send
1,000 G3 assault rifles and 150,000 bullets to Harama’ad this month.
The opposition was already
furious after the elections due for this month were postponed over political
disagreements.
“With the national elections
approaching, a season for foreign meddling is wide open,” said Jędrzej Czerep,
senior analyst at Middle East and Africa Programme of the Polish Institute of
International Affairs (PISM).
“For Turkey, in the last
decade Somalia’s most visible and dedicated development and humanitarian
partner, the game is about not losing its primacy before the oil concessions
are divided,” he told Arab News.
Ankara has not commented yet
on the Somalia opposition’s call but in recent years Turkish rulers have
deepened their engagement in the African country by building infrastructure and
providing scholarships for Somalis.
Opposition fears it will be
used by special police forces to control forthcoming elections in the war-torn
country.
Three years ago, Turkey
opened its biggest overseas military base in Somalia to have military leverage
in hotspots in the region. Apart from its forward-basing, Ankara also trains
Turkish-speaking Somali soldiers and has transferred tactical arms to the
arsenal of the Somali military.
“In the run-up to elections,
Somali President Mohamed Abdullahi Farmajo adopted an all-or-nothing mode to
consolidate power. This affected growing politicization of the – theoretically
neutral and professional – Turkish-trained Gorgor troops and Harama’ad police
units,” Czerep said.
Separately, the United
States recently decided to withdraw hundreds of troops deployed to fight
Al-Shabab terrorists in Somalia, which has been torn by a nearly 20-year civil
war.
According to Czerep, while
the US-trained Danab forces had been on the front lines of the fight against
Al-Shabab throughout 2020, Gorgor and Harama’ad were probably more often used
against the opposition in the federal member states.
“Their deployment in
Galmudug in February affected the climate of the local elections in that state
and it was boycotted by the opposition,” he said. “Turkish-trained troops also
clashed with Ahlu Sunna Wal Jamaa, a Sufi militia who was a key government ally
against Al-Shabab but apparently grew too strong. In Gedo, Gorgor and Harama’ad
fought against forces of the Jubaland region, which the central government
wants to pacify.”