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Mohamed Farrah Aidid

Mohamed Farrah Hassan Aidid (Somali: Maxamed Faarax Xasan Caydiid; Arabic: محمد فرح حسن عيديد; 15 December 1934 – 1 August 1996) was a Somali general and diplomat.

Mohamed Farrah Aidid
محمد فرح عيديد
President of Somalia
In office
15 June 1995 – 1 August 1996
Disputed with Ali Mahdi Muhammad
Preceded byAli Mahdi Muhammad
Succeeded byAli Mahdi Muhammad
Personal details
Born(1934-12-15)15 December 1934
Beledweyne, Italian Somalia[1]
Died1 August 1996(1996-08-01) (aged 61)
Mogadishu, Somalia
Political partyUnited Somali Congress/Somali National Alliance (USC/SNA)
SpouseKhadiga Gurhan
Alma materFrunze Military Academy
Military service
Years of service1960–1996
Rank
Brigadier General
Battles/warsOgaden War
Somali Civil War
 • Battle of Mogadishu

Educated in both Rome and Moscow, he served as a chief in the Italian colonial police force and later as a brigadier general in the Somali National Army. He would eventually became chairman of the United Somali Congress (USC), and soon after the Somali National Alliance (SNA). Along with other armed opposition groups, he succeeded in toppling President Siad Barre's 22 year old regime following the outbreak of the Somali Civil War in 1991.[2]

Aidid possessed aspirations for presidency of the new Somali government, and would begin to seek alliances and unions with other politico-military organizations in order to form a national government.[3]

Following the June 5, 1993 attack on the Pakistanis, the SNA - and by extension Aidid, would be blamed for the death of 25 UNOSOM II peacekeepers, causing him to become one of the first "Wanted Men" of the United Nations. After the US led July 12, 1993 Abdi House raid, which resulted in the death of many eminent members of his Habr Gidr clan, Aidid would begin deliberately targeting American troops for the first time, which would lead President Clinton to implement Operation Gothic Serpent and deploy Delta Force and Task Force Ranger to capture him. The ensuing disastrous Battle of Mogadishu on October 3–4, 1993, would lead UNOSOM to finally relent in its four month long attempt to capture him.[4]

In 1995, Aidid declared himself president of Somalia.[5] He was killed the following year in Mogadishu on August 1, 1996.[6]

Early years

Aidid was born in 1934 in the town of Beledweyne, Italian Somaliland.[2] He is from the noble Sa’ad, Habar Gidir subclan of Hawiye.[7] During the era of the British Military Administration he moved to Galkayo in the Mudug region to stay with a cousin, a policeman who would teach Aidid to both type and speak in Italian.[2]

Soon after, during the period of the Italian ruled UN trusteeship, a young Aidid enlisted in the Corpo di Polizia della Somalia (Police Corps of Somalia) and in 1954 he was sent to Italy to be trained at an infantry school in Rome, after which he was appointed to work under several high ranking Somali police officers. In 1958 Aidid would serve as Chief of Police in Banaadir Province, and the following year he returned to Italy to receive further education. In 1960, Somalia gained independence and Aidid joined the newly formed Somali National Army. He was promoted to lieutenant and became aide-de-camp of Maj. Gen. Daud Abdulle Hirsi, the first commander of the Somali National Army.[2][8]

Requiring more formal training, Aidid, having been recognized as a highly qualified officer, was selected to study advanced post graduate military science at the Frunze Military Academy (Военная академия им. М. В. Фрунзе) in the Soviet Union for three years, an elite institution reserved for the most qualified officers of the Warsaw Pact armies and their allies.[2][9]

October 1969 Coup d'état, Imprisonment and Ogaden War

In 1969, a few days after the assassination of Somalia's President Abdirashid Ali Sharmarke, a military junta known as the Supreme Revolutionary Council (SRC), led by Major General Mohamed Siad Barre, would take advantage of the disarray and stage a bloodless coup d'état on the democratically elected Somali government. At the time Aidid was serving as Lieutenant Colonel in the army with 26th Division in Hargeisa. He was also the Head of Operations for the Central and Northern Regions of Somalia. After the assassination, he was relieved of his duties and was recalled to Mogadishu to lead the troops guarding the burial of the deceased President. By November 1969, he had quickly fallen under suspicion by high ranking members of the Supreme Revolutionary Council, including Barre. Without trial, he was subsequently detained in Mandhera Prison along with Colonel Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed for nearly six years.[10][11][8] Both Colonel Aidid and Yusuf were widely regarded to be politically ambitious officers, and potential figureheads in a future coup attempt.[12] Aidid claimed that his imprisonment was a result of encouraging President Barre to transfer power over from the Somali military to civilian technocrats.[13]

Aidid was eventually released in October 1975, and he returned to service in the Somali National Army to take part in the 1977-1978 Ogaden War against Ethiopia.[10][8] During the war he was promoted to brigadier general and became an aide-de-camp to President Mohammed Siad Barre.[2] Headquartered in Hargeisa, Brig Gen Aidid and Maj Gen Gallel would command the 26th Division on the Dire Dawa Front.[14] After the war, having served with distinction, Aidid worked as a presidential staffer to Barre before being appointed intelligence minister.[15][16][17][18]

 
Brigadier General Aidid (left), and president Barre likely during or just after the Ogaden War

Under pressure from President Barre, Aidid gave a written guarantee in 1978 that Col Abdullahi Yusuf would not attempt a coup d'eat. Yusuf would go on to break the pledge in a failed coup attempt and escaped to Ethiopia. Aided was left stranded but was rescued by a high ranking ally in the regime, and was consequently saved from any punishment.[12]

Somali Rebellion and Civil War

In 1979, Barre appointed Aidid to parliament, but in 1984, after perceiving him as a potential rival, sent him away to India by making Aidid the ambassador for Somalia.[15][16][17]

He would use his time in the country to frequently attend lectures at the University of Delhi and with the aid of Indian lecturers at the University of Delhi, completed three books (A Vision of Somalia, The Preferred Future Development in Somalia and Somalia from the Dawn of Human Civilization to Today) .[12]

United Somali Congress

By the late 1980s, Barre's regime had become increasingly unpopular. The State took an increasingly hard line, and insurgencies, encouraged by Ethiopia's communist Derg administration, sprang up across the country. Being a member of the Hawiye clan, a high ranking government official and an experienced soldier, Aidid was deemed a natural choice for helping lead the military campaign for the United Somali Congress against the regime, and he was soon persuaded to leave New Delhi and return to Somalia.[18] Aidid defected from the embassy to India in 1989 and then left the country to join the growing opposition against the Barre regime. Following his defection, he had received an invitation from Ethiopian President Mengistu Haile-Mariam, who would go on to give Aidid permission to create and run a USC military operation from Ethiopian soil.[12] From base camps near the Somali-Ethiopian border, he began directing the final military offensive of the newly formed United Somali Congress to seize Mogadishu and topple the regime.[13]

The USC was at that time split into three factions: USC-Rome, USC-Mogadishu, later followed by USC-Ethiopia; as neither the first two former locations were a suitable launching pad to topple the Barre regime. Ali Mahdi Mohamed, an influential member of the congress who would later become Aidid's prime rival, opposed Aidid's involvement in the USC and supported the Rome faction of the Congress, who also resented Aidid. The first serious signs of fractures within the USC came in June 1990, when Mahdi and the USC-Rome faction rejected the election of Aidid to chairman of the USC, disputing the validity of the vote.[19] That same month Aidid would go on to form a military alliance with the northern Somali National Movement (SNM) and the Somali Patriotic Movement (SPM). In October 1990, the SNM, SPM and USC would sign an agreement to hold no peace talks until the complete and total overthrow of the Barre regime. They further agreed to form a provisional government following Barres removal, and then to hold elections.[12]

By November 1990, the news of Gen. Aidid's USC forces overrunning President Siad Barres 21st army in the Mudug, Galgudud and Hiran regions convinced many that a war in Mogadishu was imminent, leading the civilian population of the city to begin rapidly arming itself.[12] This, combined with actions of other rebel organizations, eventually led to the full outbreak of the Somali civil war, the gradual breakup of the Somali Armed Forces, and the toppling of the Barre regime in Mogadishu on 26 January 1991. Following the power vacuum left by the fall of Barre, the situation in Somalia began to rapidly spiral out of control, and rebel factions subsequently began to fight for control of the remnants of the Somali state. Most notably, the split between the two main factions of the United Somali Congress (USC), led by Aidid and his rival Ali Mahdi, would result in serious fighting and vast swathes of Mogadishu would consequently destroyed as both factions attempted to exert control over the city.[20][21]

Both Ali Mahdi and Aidid claimed to lead national unity governments, and each vied to lead the reconstruction of the Somali state.[8]

Somali National Alliance

Aidid's wing of the USC would morph into the Somalia National Alliance (SNA) or USC/SNA. During the spring and summer of 1992, Former President Siad Barres army attempted to retake Mogadishu, but successful joint defence and counterattack by Aidid's USC wing, the Somali Patriotic Movement (SPM), the Somali Southern National Movement (SSNM) and Somali Democratic Movement (SDM) (all united under the banner of the Somali Liberation Army) to push the last remnants of Barres troops out of southern Somalia into Kenya on June 16, 1992 would lead to the formation of the political union known as the Somali National Alliance.[3] This absorption of different political organizations was critical to Aidid’s approach to taking the presidency.[8]

As leader of the Somali National Alliance, Aidid, with presidential aspirations, expressed the goal of using the SNA as a base for working toward forming a national reconciliation government and claimed to also be aiming for an eventual multi-party democracy. To this end Aidid required and sought political agreements with the only two remaining major factions, the Somali National Movement (SNM) and Somali Salvation Democratic Front (SSDF), to leave his main rival Ali Mahdi Mohamed isolated in an enclave in North Mogadishu.[3][13]

Aidid's grip on power in the SNA was fragile, as his ability to impose decisions on the organization was limited. A council of elders held decision making power for most significant issues and elections were held that threatened Aidid's chairmanship.[22][23]

United Nations Intervention

In April 1992 the United Nations intervened in Somalia, creating UNOSOM I. United Nations Security Council Resolution 794 was unanimously passed on 3 December 1992, which approved a coalition led by the United States. Forming the Unified Task Force (UNITAF), the alliance was given the task of assuring security until humanitarian efforts were transferred to the UN.[24]

Aidid initially publicly opposed the deployment of United Nations forces to Somalia, but eventually relented.[2] He and UN Secretary-General Boutros Boutros Ghali both despised one another. Before being Secretary-General, Boutros Ghali had been an Egyptian diplomat that had supported President Siad Barre against the USC in the late 80s and early 90s.[25]

In January 1993, Special Representative of the UN in Somalia, Ismat Kittani, requested the Aidid come to the Addis Abba Peace Conference set to be held in March.[26]

Presidency declaration

Aidid subsequently declared himself President of Somalia in June 1995.[27] However, his declaration received no international recognition, as his rival Ali Mahdi Muhammad had already been elected interim president at a conference in 1991 in Djibouti and recognized as such by the international community.[28]

Death

On 24 July 1996, Aidid and his men clashed with the forces of former allies Ali Mahdi Muhammad and Osman Ali Atto. Atto was a former supporter and financier of Aidid, and of the same subclan. Atto is alleged to have masterminded the defeat of Aidid.[29] Aidid suffered a gunshot wound in the ensuing battle. He later died from a heart attack on 1 August 1996,[30] either during or after surgery to treat his injuries.[31]

Family

During the leading up to the civil war, Aidid's wife Khadiga Gurhan sought asylum in Canada in 1989, taking their four children with her. Local media shortly afterwards alleged that she had returned to Somalia for a five-month stay while still receiving welfare payments. Gurhan admitted in an interview to collecting welfare and having briefly traveled to Somalia in late 1991. However, it was later brought to light that she had been granted landed immigrant status in June 1991, thereby making her a legal resident of Canada. Additionally, Aidid's rival President Barre had been overthrown in January of that year. This altogether ensured that Gurhan's five-month trip would not have undermined her initial 1989 claim of refugee status. An official probe by Canadian immigration officials into the allegations also concluded that she had obtained her landing papers through normal legal processes.[32]

Hussein Mohamed Farrah, son of General Aidid, emigrated to the United States when he was 17 years old. Staying 16 years in the country, he eventually became a naturalized citizen and later a United States Marine who served in Somalia. Two days after his father's death, the Somali National Alliance declared Farrah as the new president, although he too was not internationally recognized as such.[33]

Notes

  1. ^ Mukhtar, Mohamed Haji (25 February 2003). Historical Dictionary of Somalia. pp. 155–156. ISBN 9780810866041.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Mukhtar, Mohamed Haji (2003). Historical Dictionary of Somalia. Margaret Castagno. Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow Press. pp. 155–156. ISBN 978-0-8108-6604-1. OCLC 268778107.
  3. ^ a b c Drysdale, John (1994). Whatever happened to Somalia?. London: HAAN. pp. 44–45. ISBN 1-874209-51-0. OCLC 30736422.
  4. ^ Lewis, Paul (17 November 1993). "SEARCH FOR AIDID OFFICIALLY ENDED". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 12 September 2022.
  5. ^ "SOMALI WARLORD APPOINTING DOZENS TO CABINET". Deseret News. 26 June 1995. Retrieved 12 September 2022.
  6. ^ "Somali Faction Leader Gen. Aidid Is Dead, Radio Says". AP NEWS. Retrieved 12 September 2022.
  7. ^ Purvis, Andrew (28 June 1993). . Time. Archived from the original on 28 April 2007. Retrieved 2 January 2007.
  8. ^ a b c d e Ingiriis, Mohamed Haji (2016). The Suicidal State in Somalia : The Rise and Fall of the Siad Barre Regime (1969-1991). UPA. ISBN 978-0-7618-6719-7. OCLC 951539094.
  9. ^ Ahmed III, Abdul. (PDF). WardheerNews. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 May 2012. Retrieved 15 July 2012.
  10. ^ a b United Nations. Dept. of Public Information (1996). The Blue Helmets: A Review of United Nations Peace-keeping. United Nations, Dept. of Public Information. p. 287. ISBN 9211006112.
  11. ^ Ismail Ali Ismail (2010). Governance : the scourge and hope of Somalia. [Bloomington, IN]: Trafford Pub. p. 214. ISBN 978-1-4269-1980-0. OCLC 620115177.
  12. ^ a b c d e f Drysdale, John (1994). Whatever happened to Somalia?. London: HAAN. pp. 20–28. ISBN 1-874209-51-0. OCLC 30736422.
  13. ^ a b c Richburg, Keith (8 September 1992). "AIDEED: WARLORD IN A FAMISHED LAND". Washington Post.
  14. ^ Cooper, Tom (2015). Wings over Ogaden : the Ethiopian-Somali War 1978-1979. Helion & Company. ISBN 978-1-909982-38-3. OCLC 1091720875.
  15. ^ a b . 9 September 2007. Archived from the original on 9 September 2007. Retrieved 23 March 2018.
  16. ^ a b Daniels, Christopher L. (5 April 2012). Somali Piracy and Terrorism in the Horn of Africa. ISBN 9780810883116.
  17. ^ a b Stevenson, Jonathan (1995). Losing Mogadishu : testing U.S. policy in Somalia. Annapolis, Md.: Naval Institute Press. p. 29. ISBN 1-55750-788-0. OCLC 31435791.
  18. ^ a b Biddle, Stephen D (26 July 2022). Nonstate warfare : the military methods of guerillas, warlords, and militias. p. 184. ISBN 978-0-691-21666-9. OCLC 1328017938.
  19. ^ Drysdale, John (1994). Whatever happened to Somalia?. London: HAAN. pp. 15–16. ISBN 1-874209-51-0. OCLC 30736422.
  20. ^ Library Information and Research Service, The Middle East: Abstracts and Index, Volume 2, (Library Information and Research Service: 1999), p.327.
  21. ^ Ahmed III, Abdul. (PDF). WardheerNews. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 May 2012. Retrieved 28 February 2012.
  22. ^ Drysdale, John (1994). Whatever happened to Somalia?. London: HAAN. p. 9. ISBN 1-874209-51-0. OCLC 30736422.
  23. ^ Biddle, Stephen D. (2021). Nonstate warfare : the military methods of guerillas, warlords, and militias. Council on Foreign Relations. Princeton. pp. 182–224. ISBN 978-0-691-21665-2. OCLC 1224042096.
  24. ^ Ken Rutherford, Humanitarianism Under Fire: The US and UN Intervention in Somalia, Kumarian Press, July 2008 ISBN 1-56549-260-9
  25. ^ Bowden, Mark (2010). Black Hawk Down : A Story of Modern War. New York. pp. 71–72. ISBN 978-0-8021-4473-7. OCLC 456177378.
  26. ^ Drysdale, John (1994). Whatever happened to Somalia?. London: HAAN. p. 6. ISBN 1-874209-51-0. OCLC 30736422.
  27. ^ . September 1995. Archived from the original on 16 July 2009. Retrieved 4 February 2007.
  28. ^ Djibouti Conference 16 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine.
  29. ^ Indian Ocean Newsletter, 27 April 1996 and Indian Ocean Newsletter, 4 May 1996
  30. ^ Black Hawk Down 2001 A movie made by the USA =
  31. ^ Serrill, Michael (12 August 1996), "Dead by the Sword", Time Magazine, retrieved 19 March 2011
  32. ^ Anderson, Scott (4 November 1993). . Eye Weekly. Archived from the original on 28 October 2014. Retrieved 18 February 2013.
  33. ^ Kampeas, Ron (2 November 2002). "From Marine to warlord: The strange journey of Hussein Farrah Aidid". Associated Press. Retrieved 28 February 2007.

References

  • Drysdale, John. Whatever Happened to Somalia?: A Tale of Tragic Blunders London: HAAN Publishing. 1994.
  • Bowden, Mark. . Berkeley, California: Atlantic Monthly Press. March 1999.
  • . CNN. 2 August 1996. Archived from the original on 10 March 2006.
  • Lutz, David. Hannover Institute of Philosophical Research. (research paper). Front Royal, Virginia: Joint Services Conference on Professional Ethics. 2000.
  • McKinley, James. 'How a U.S. Marine Became a Warlord in Somalia'. New York: The New York Times. 16 August 1996.

mohamed, farrah, aidid, mohamed, farrah, hassan, aidid, somali, maxamed, faarax, xasan, caydiid, arabic, محمد, فرح, حسن, عيديد, december, 1934, august, 1996, somali, general, diplomat, محمد, فرح, عيديدpresident, somaliain, office, june, 1995, august, 1996dispu. Mohamed Farrah Hassan Aidid Somali Maxamed Faarax Xasan Caydiid Arabic محمد فرح حسن عيديد 15 December 1934 1 August 1996 was a Somali general and diplomat Mohamed Farrah Aididمحمد فرح عيديدPresident of SomaliaIn office 15 June 1995 1 August 1996Disputed with Ali Mahdi MuhammadPreceded byAli Mahdi MuhammadSucceeded byAli Mahdi MuhammadPersonal detailsBorn 1934 12 15 15 December 1934Beledweyne Italian Somalia 1 Died1 August 1996 1996 08 01 aged 61 Mogadishu SomaliaPolitical partyUnited Somali Congress Somali National Alliance USC SNA SpouseKhadiga GurhanAlma materFrunze Military AcademyMilitary serviceYears of service1960 1996RankBrigadier GeneralBattles warsOgaden WarSomali Civil War Battle of MogadishuEducated in both Rome and Moscow he served as a chief in the Italian colonial police force and later as a brigadier general in the Somali National Army He would eventually became chairman of the United Somali Congress USC and soon after the Somali National Alliance SNA Along with other armed opposition groups he succeeded in toppling President Siad Barre s 22 year old regime following the outbreak of the Somali Civil War in 1991 2 Aidid possessed aspirations for presidency of the new Somali government and would begin to seek alliances and unions with other politico military organizations in order to form a national government 3 Following the June 5 1993 attack on the Pakistanis the SNA and by extension Aidid would be blamed for the death of 25 UNOSOM II peacekeepers causing him to become one of the first Wanted Men of the United Nations After the US led July 12 1993 Abdi House raid which resulted in the death of many eminent members of his Habr Gidr clan Aidid would begin deliberately targeting American troops for the first time which would lead President Clinton to implement Operation Gothic Serpent and deploy Delta Force and Task Force Ranger to capture him The ensuing disastrous Battle of Mogadishu on October 3 4 1993 would lead UNOSOM to finally relent in its four month long attempt to capture him 4 In 1995 Aidid declared himself president of Somalia 5 He was killed the following year in Mogadishu on August 1 1996 6 Contents 1 Early years 1 1 October 1969 Coup d etat Imprisonment and Ogaden War 2 Somali Rebellion and Civil War 2 1 United Somali Congress 2 2 Somali National Alliance 3 United Nations Intervention 4 Presidency declaration 5 Death 6 Family 7 Notes 8 ReferencesEarly years EditMain articles 1969 Somali coup d etat and Ogaden War Aidid was born in 1934 in the town of Beledweyne Italian Somaliland 2 He is from the noble Sa ad Habar Gidir subclan of Hawiye 7 During the era of the British Military Administration he moved to Galkayo in the Mudug region to stay with a cousin a policeman who would teach Aidid to both type and speak in Italian 2 Soon after during the period of the Italian ruled UN trusteeship a young Aidid enlisted in the Corpo di Polizia della Somalia Police Corps of Somalia and in 1954 he was sent to Italy to be trained at an infantry school in Rome after which he was appointed to work under several high ranking Somali police officers In 1958 Aidid would serve as Chief of Police in Banaadir Province and the following year he returned to Italy to receive further education In 1960 Somalia gained independence and Aidid joined the newly formed Somali National Army He was promoted to lieutenant and became aide de camp of Maj Gen Daud Abdulle Hirsi the first commander of the Somali National Army 2 8 Requiring more formal training Aidid having been recognized as a highly qualified officer was selected to study advanced post graduate military science at the Frunze Military Academy Voennaya akademiya im M V Frunze in the Soviet Union for three years an elite institution reserved for the most qualified officers of the Warsaw Pact armies and their allies 2 9 October 1969 Coup d etat Imprisonment and Ogaden War Edit In 1969 a few days after the assassination of Somalia s President Abdirashid Ali Sharmarke a military junta known as the Supreme Revolutionary Council SRC led by Major General Mohamed Siad Barre would take advantage of the disarray and stage a bloodless coup d etat on the democratically elected Somali government At the time Aidid was serving as Lieutenant Colonel in the army with 26th Division in Hargeisa He was also the Head of Operations for the Central and Northern Regions of Somalia After the assassination he was relieved of his duties and was recalled to Mogadishu to lead the troops guarding the burial of the deceased President By November 1969 he had quickly fallen under suspicion by high ranking members of the Supreme Revolutionary Council including Barre Without trial he was subsequently detained in Mandhera Prison along with Colonel Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed for nearly six years 10 11 8 Both Colonel Aidid and Yusuf were widely regarded to be politically ambitious officers and potential figureheads in a future coup attempt 12 Aidid claimed that his imprisonment was a result of encouraging President Barre to transfer power over from the Somali military to civilian technocrats 13 Aidid was eventually released in October 1975 and he returned to service in the Somali National Army to take part in the 1977 1978 Ogaden War against Ethiopia 10 8 During the war he was promoted to brigadier general and became an aide de camp to President Mohammed Siad Barre 2 Headquartered in Hargeisa Brig Gen Aidid and Maj Gen Gallel would command the 26th Division on the Dire Dawa Front 14 After the war having served with distinction Aidid worked as a presidential staffer to Barre before being appointed intelligence minister 15 16 17 18 Brigadier General Aidid left and president Barre likely during or just after the Ogaden WarUnder pressure from President Barre Aidid gave a written guarantee in 1978 that Col Abdullahi Yusuf would not attempt a coup d eat Yusuf would go on to break the pledge in a failed coup attempt and escaped to Ethiopia Aided was left stranded but was rescued by a high ranking ally in the regime and was consequently saved from any punishment 12 Somali Rebellion and Civil War EditMain articles Somali Civil War United Somali Congress and Somali National Alliance In 1979 Barre appointed Aidid to parliament but in 1984 after perceiving him as a potential rival sent him away to India by making Aidid the ambassador for Somalia 15 16 17 He would use his time in the country to frequently attend lectures at the University of Delhi and with the aid of Indian lecturers at the University of Delhi completed three books A Vision of Somalia The Preferred Future Development in Somalia and Somalia from the Dawn of Human Civilization to Today 12 United Somali Congress Edit By the late 1980s Barre s regime had become increasingly unpopular The State took an increasingly hard line and insurgencies encouraged by Ethiopia s communist Derg administration sprang up across the country Being a member of the Hawiye clan a high ranking government official and an experienced soldier Aidid was deemed a natural choice for helping lead the military campaign for the United Somali Congress against the regime and he was soon persuaded to leave New Delhi and return to Somalia 18 Aidid defected from the embassy to India in 1989 and then left the country to join the growing opposition against the Barre regime Following his defection he had received an invitation from Ethiopian President Mengistu Haile Mariam who would go on to give Aidid permission to create and run a USC military operation from Ethiopian soil 12 From base camps near the Somali Ethiopian border he began directing the final military offensive of the newly formed United Somali Congress to seize Mogadishu and topple the regime 13 The USC was at that time split into three factions USC Rome USC Mogadishu later followed by USC Ethiopia as neither the first two former locations were a suitable launching pad to topple the Barre regime Ali Mahdi Mohamed an influential member of the congress who would later become Aidid s prime rival opposed Aidid s involvement in the USC and supported the Rome faction of the Congress who also resented Aidid The first serious signs of fractures within the USC came in June 1990 when Mahdi and the USC Rome faction rejected the election of Aidid to chairman of the USC disputing the validity of the vote 19 That same month Aidid would go on to form a military alliance with the northern Somali National Movement SNM and the Somali Patriotic Movement SPM In October 1990 the SNM SPM and USC would sign an agreement to hold no peace talks until the complete and total overthrow of the Barre regime They further agreed to form a provisional government following Barres removal and then to hold elections 12 By November 1990 the news of Gen Aidid s USC forces overrunning President Siad Barres 21st army in the Mudug Galgudud and Hiran regions convinced many that a war in Mogadishu was imminent leading the civilian population of the city to begin rapidly arming itself 12 This combined with actions of other rebel organizations eventually led to the full outbreak of the Somali civil war the gradual breakup of the Somali Armed Forces and the toppling of the Barre regime in Mogadishu on 26 January 1991 Following the power vacuum left by the fall of Barre the situation in Somalia began to rapidly spiral out of control and rebel factions subsequently began to fight for control of the remnants of the Somali state Most notably the split between the two main factions of the United Somali Congress USC led by Aidid and his rival Ali Mahdi would result in serious fighting and vast swathes of Mogadishu would consequently destroyed as both factions attempted to exert control over the city 20 21 Both Ali Mahdi and Aidid claimed to lead national unity governments and each vied to lead the reconstruction of the Somali state 8 Somali National Alliance Edit Aidid s wing of the USC would morph into the Somalia National Alliance SNA or USC SNA During the spring and summer of 1992 Former President Siad Barres army attempted to retake Mogadishu but successful joint defence and counterattack by Aidid s USC wing the Somali Patriotic Movement SPM the Somali Southern National Movement SSNM and Somali Democratic Movement SDM all united under the banner of the Somali Liberation Army to push the last remnants of Barres troops out of southern Somalia into Kenya on June 16 1992 would lead to the formation of the political union known as the Somali National Alliance 3 This absorption of different political organizations was critical to Aidid s approach to taking the presidency 8 As leader of the Somali National Alliance Aidid with presidential aspirations expressed the goal of using the SNA as a base for working toward forming a national reconciliation government and claimed to also be aiming for an eventual multi party democracy To this end Aidid required and sought political agreements with the only two remaining major factions the Somali National Movement SNM and Somali Salvation Democratic Front SSDF to leave his main rival Ali Mahdi Mohamed isolated in an enclave in North Mogadishu 3 13 Aidid s grip on power in the SNA was fragile as his ability to impose decisions on the organization was limited A council of elders held decision making power for most significant issues and elections were held that threatened Aidid s chairmanship 22 23 United Nations Intervention EditMain articles June 1993 attack on Pakistani military in Somalia Abdi House raid and Battle of Mogadishu 1993 In April 1992 the United Nations intervened in Somalia creating UNOSOM I United Nations Security Council Resolution 794 was unanimously passed on 3 December 1992 which approved a coalition led by the United States Forming the Unified Task Force UNITAF the alliance was given the task of assuring security until humanitarian efforts were transferred to the UN 24 Aidid initially publicly opposed the deployment of United Nations forces to Somalia but eventually relented 2 He and UN Secretary General Boutros Boutros Ghali both despised one another Before being Secretary General Boutros Ghali had been an Egyptian diplomat that had supported President Siad Barre against the USC in the late 80s and early 90s 25 In January 1993 Special Representative of the UN in Somalia Ismat Kittani requested the Aidid come to the Addis Abba Peace Conference set to be held in March 26 Presidency declaration EditAidid subsequently declared himself President of Somalia in June 1995 27 However his declaration received no international recognition as his rival Ali Mahdi Muhammad had already been elected interim president at a conference in 1991 in Djibouti and recognized as such by the international community 28 Death EditOn 24 July 1996 Aidid and his men clashed with the forces of former allies Ali Mahdi Muhammad and Osman Ali Atto Atto was a former supporter and financier of Aidid and of the same subclan Atto is alleged to have masterminded the defeat of Aidid 29 Aidid suffered a gunshot wound in the ensuing battle He later died from a heart attack on 1 August 1996 30 either during or after surgery to treat his injuries 31 Family EditDuring the leading up to the civil war Aidid s wife Khadiga Gurhan sought asylum in Canada in 1989 taking their four children with her Local media shortly afterwards alleged that she had returned to Somalia for a five month stay while still receiving welfare payments Gurhan admitted in an interview to collecting welfare and having briefly traveled to Somalia in late 1991 However it was later brought to light that she had been granted landed immigrant status in June 1991 thereby making her a legal resident of Canada Additionally Aidid s rival President Barre had been overthrown in January of that year This altogether ensured that Gurhan s five month trip would not have undermined her initial 1989 claim of refugee status An official probe by Canadian immigration officials into the allegations also concluded that she had obtained her landing papers through normal legal processes 32 Hussein Mohamed Farrah son of General Aidid emigrated to the United States when he was 17 years old Staying 16 years in the country he eventually became a naturalized citizen and later a United States Marine who served in Somalia Two days after his father s death the Somali National Alliance declared Farrah as the new president although he too was not internationally recognized as such 33 Notes Edit Mukhtar Mohamed Haji 25 February 2003 Historical Dictionary of Somalia pp 155 156 ISBN 9780810866041 a b c d e f g Mukhtar Mohamed Haji 2003 Historical Dictionary of Somalia Margaret Castagno Lanham Md Scarecrow Press pp 155 156 ISBN 978 0 8108 6604 1 OCLC 268778107 a b c Drysdale John 1994 Whatever happened to Somalia London HAAN pp 44 45 ISBN 1 874209 51 0 OCLC 30736422 Lewis Paul 17 November 1993 SEARCH FOR AIDID OFFICIALLY ENDED The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 12 September 2022 SOMALI WARLORD APPOINTING DOZENS TO CABINET Deseret News 26 June 1995 Retrieved 12 September 2022 Somali Faction Leader Gen Aidid Is Dead Radio Says AP NEWS Retrieved 12 September 2022 Purvis Andrew 28 June 1993 Wanted Warlord No 1 Time Archived from the original on 28 April 2007 Retrieved 2 January 2007 a b c d e Ingiriis Mohamed Haji 2016 The Suicidal State in Somalia The Rise and Fall of the Siad Barre Regime 1969 1991 UPA ISBN 978 0 7618 6719 7 OCLC 951539094 Ahmed III Abdul Brothers in Arms Part I PDF WardheerNews Archived from the original PDF on 3 May 2012 Retrieved 15 July 2012 a b United Nations Dept of Public Information 1996 The Blue Helmets A Review of United Nations Peace keeping United Nations Dept of Public Information p 287 ISBN 9211006112 Ismail Ali Ismail 2010 Governance the scourge and hope of Somalia Bloomington IN Trafford Pub p 214 ISBN 978 1 4269 1980 0 OCLC 620115177 a b c d e f Drysdale John 1994 Whatever happened to Somalia London HAAN pp 20 28 ISBN 1 874209 51 0 OCLC 30736422 a b c Richburg Keith 8 September 1992 AIDEED WARLORD IN A FAMISHED LAND Washington Post Cooper Tom 2015 Wings over Ogaden the Ethiopian Somali War 1978 1979 Helion amp Company ISBN 978 1 909982 38 3 OCLC 1091720875 a b CNN Somali faction leader Aidid dies Aug 2 1996 9 September 2007 Archived from the original on 9 September 2007 Retrieved 23 March 2018 a b Daniels Christopher L 5 April 2012 Somali Piracy and Terrorism in the Horn of Africa ISBN 9780810883116 a b Stevenson Jonathan 1995 Losing Mogadishu testing U S policy in Somalia Annapolis Md Naval Institute Press p 29 ISBN 1 55750 788 0 OCLC 31435791 a b Biddle Stephen D 26 July 2022 Nonstate warfare the military methods of guerillas warlords and militias p 184 ISBN 978 0 691 21666 9 OCLC 1328017938 Drysdale John 1994 Whatever happened to Somalia London HAAN pp 15 16 ISBN 1 874209 51 0 OCLC 30736422 Library Information and Research Service The Middle East Abstracts and Index Volume 2 Library Information and Research Service 1999 p 327 Ahmed III Abdul Brothers in Arms Part Forces I PDF WardheerNews Archived from the original PDF on 3 May 2012 Retrieved 28 February 2012 Drysdale John 1994 Whatever happened to Somalia London HAAN p 9 ISBN 1 874209 51 0 OCLC 30736422 Biddle Stephen D 2021 Nonstate warfare the military methods of guerillas warlords and militias Council on Foreign Relations Princeton pp 182 224 ISBN 978 0 691 21665 2 OCLC 1224042096 Ken Rutherford Humanitarianism Under Fire The US and UN Intervention in Somalia Kumarian Press July 2008 ISBN 1 56549 260 9 Bowden Mark 2010 Black Hawk Down A Story of Modern War New York pp 71 72 ISBN 978 0 8021 4473 7 OCLC 456177378 Drysdale John 1994 Whatever happened to Somalia London HAAN p 6 ISBN 1 874209 51 0 OCLC 30736422 President Aidid s Somalia September 1995 Archived from the original on 16 July 2009 Retrieved 4 February 2007 Djibouti Conference Archived 16 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Indian Ocean Newsletter 27 April 1996 and Indian Ocean Newsletter 4 May 1996 Black Hawk Down 2001 A movie made by the USA Serrill Michael 12 August 1996 Dead by the Sword Time Magazine retrieved 19 March 2011 Anderson Scott 4 November 1993 Tory probe into warlord s wife too late to save Lewis Eye Weekly Archived from the original on 28 October 2014 Retrieved 18 February 2013 Kampeas Ron 2 November 2002 From Marine to warlord The strange journey of Hussein Farrah Aidid Associated Press Retrieved 28 February 2007 References EditDrysdale John Whatever Happened to Somalia A Tale of Tragic Blunders London HAAN Publishing 1994 Bowden Mark Black Hawk Down A Story of Modern War Berkeley California Atlantic Monthly Press March 1999 Somali faction leader Aidid dies CNN 2 August 1996 Archived from the original on 10 March 2006 Lutz David Hannover Institute of Philosophical Research The Ethics of American Military Policy in Africa research paper Front Royal Virginia Joint Services Conference on Professional Ethics 2000 McKinley James How a U S Marine Became a Warlord in Somalia New York The New York Times 16 August 1996 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mohamed Farrah Aidid amp oldid 1154083235, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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