Qatar … The cancer that invades the heart of Somalia

The Qatari policies have not stopped
supporting and financing terrorist organizations in East Asia. Qatar has been
spreading in cancerous way in Africa; by giving life to the al-Qaeda affiliates
in the African sub-continent after it retreated noticeably against the Islamic
State (Daesh) which announced its alleged caliphate in 2014. This has since
then intensified the conflict between the two organizations on the leadership
of terrorism in the world.
Among the most prominent terrorist
organizations supported by Doha is the Somali Mujahideen Youth Movement, which
is considered one of the military and intellectual wings of al-Qaeda in the
African continent and the most prominent organization in Somalia; despite the dissidence
of 30 of its members led by Abdul Qadir Mumin. They also announced their pledge of loyalty to
Abu Bakr el-Baghdadi, the leader of the Daesh terrorist group, to compensate
for the losses they suffered during the past years with the decline of Al Qaeda
and the expansion of Daesh.
Qatar exploited the situation of security
deterioration and chaos that engulfed Somalia following the fall of the regime
of Siad Barre in 1991 to exercise its hobby in supporting the terrorist
factions and having a foothold through which it can play a larger role and
exert influence that is disproportionate to its political history. The country’s
funds have played a pivotal role in a number of brutal massacres committed by Al-Shabab
movement against civilians and political leaders. Its elements have also carried
out suicide attacks in the Somali capital Mogadishu and in various parts of the
country, most notably the assassination of former Somali Interior Minister Omar
Hashi and at least 30 others following a bombing inside a hotel in Beledweyne,
central Somalia, on June 18, 2009.
Due to the poor economic situation in Somalia
in recent decades, a large number of its youth have fallen prey to Qatari
funds, which have financed and fed terrorist activities in the Arab region
after recruiting many young people as militia elements within the ranks of the Somali
movement and other terrorist organizations in exchange for receiving monthly
salaries. Qatar also provided media support through its TV network Al-Jazeera
to the leaders of the movement by hosting them on its screen, especially after
the launch of its Swahili-speaking channel, which is spoken by a number of
African countries, as a soft power to promote Al-Shabab movement and terrorist
organizations there.
Al-Shabab movement also prevented citizens from
performing their rituals and daily life practices. They destroyed Sufi shrines
and mosques in their areas of control, and prevented residents from practicing
arts such as dance and music at weddings, banned cellphone music, closed cafes
and cinemas, and prevented them from watching movies as well as playing or
watching football matches on the pretext that it is haram (not religiously
permissible).
According to a report by the International
Crisis Group, the Somali youth movement has been receiving Qatari funding since
its establishment. The Somali website "Jarwi Online" reported that
this movement is not the only one supported by the Qatari state, but Qatar also
supports the Muslim Brotherhood and its counterparts from other organizations.
Doha plays this role under various covers,
including charity, humanitarian and relief work, through non-governmental
organizations (most of them are infiltrated by the Muslim Brotherhood). These
NGOs include Qatar Charity, Red Crescent and Raf Foundation, which collects
Qatari donations under the pretext of philanthropy. They then distribute them
on extremists and terrorists in the Horn of Africa, specifically in Somalia,
Ethiopia, Eritrea, Djibouti and Kenya.
Several reports confirm Doha's involvement in
supporting and funding terrorist organizations, groups and movements in the
Horn of Africa, including the US State Department, the Treasury, and a number
of research institutions and centers, such as the American Democracy Support
Foundation, the Center for Penalties and Secret Financing, in addition to
accusations leveled by former prime minister of the Somali transitional
government Sharif Sheikh Ahmed, who explicitly addressed Qatar during a meeting
with US diplomats in Libya, saying: "The Government of Qatar provides
financial support to Al-Shabab movement."
According to a three-part study released by
“Support Democracy” institution titled “Qatar and the Funding of Terrorism”,
Al-Shabab received $250,000 from the internationally-wanted Qatari businessman
Abdulrahman al-Nuaimi, who has a strong relationship with the movement's
leader, Hassan Aweys, who is currently held by Somali authorities. .
In July last year, the Qatar Insider website published
a report on the role of Doha in the financing of Al-Shabab, details of the
moves of the Qatari regime to fuel civil wars in the Horn of Africa and its
prolongation upon orders made by the United States of America through its
investment companies in Eritrea.
There were several factors that helped
al-Qaeda enter and expand Somalia, including the chaos that followed the fall
of the central government and the failure of international political mediations
to contain the situation and the unification of the conflicting powers with the
emergence of the Islamic Union Movement as an armed movement after the fall of
the regime in 1991. The movement welcomed the arrival of al-Qaeda on order to
establish an Islamic emirate in Somalia. Another important factor is the failure
of Daesh to include more elements of the Qatari-backed Al-Shabab movement,
which have between 7,000 to 13,000 fighters, enjoying wide influence within the
Horn of Africa that stands against the extension of the IS organization.