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Western Somali Liberation Front

The Western Somali Liberation Front (Somali: Jabhadda Xoreynta Somali Galbeed; abbreviated WSLF) was a separatist rebel group fighting in eastern Ethiopia to liberate the Ogaden region from Ethiopian control. It played a major role in the Ogaden War of 1977–78, assisting the invading Somali Army.

Western Somali Liberation Front
Jabhadda Xoreynta Somali Galbeed
Flag of the Western Somali Liberation Front
Dates of operation1973–1985
Active regionsOgaden
Size30,000 (1977)
18,000 (1980)
Allies Somalia
Opponents Ethiopia
Battles and warsEthiopian Civil War
Ogaden War

Background edit

After World War II, Somali leaders in the Ogaden region of Ethiopia persistently advocated for self-determination, yet their pleas were consistently disregarded by both Ethiopia and the United Nations.[1] In the post-war period, the British handed over the Ogaden to Haile Selassie's government. The region had been nominally under the rule of the Ethiopian Empire since Menelik's expansions in the late 1800s. Additionally, the British also handed over lands east of Jigjiga that had never been administered by the Ethiopian Empire.[2]

1963 uprising edit

During the late 1940s and 1950's, covert Somali organizations in the Ogaden formed with the aim of freeing the region from Ethiopian rule.[3][4] In 1963, the first major rebellion in the region broke out. Known as 'Nasrallah' or the Ogaden Liberation Front, the organization began with 300 men and soon swelled to 3,000.[5][6] The Ethiopian Imperial Army launched a large scale counterinsurgency campaign during the summer and fall of 1963. The imperial governments reprisals during the counterinsurgency campaign, which consisted large scale artillery bombardments of Somali cities in the Ogaden, resulted in rapidly deteriorating relations between the Ethiopian Empire and the Somali Republic, eventually resulting the 1964 Border War.[6][3] In the years following, insurgent activity continued but declined over the late 1960's due to pressures from both the Ethiopian and Somali governments. The Nasrallah insurgents formed the foundation of the future Western Somali Liberation Front.[7][8]

Between 1965 and 1975, Nasrallah began emphasizing on building the political and diplomatic groundwork for another liberation struggle. The organization opened an office in Mogadishu and in sympathetic Arab states such as Iraq and Syria.[8]

History edit

Formation edit

The early 1970's saw the Ogaden liberation movement continue to gain momentum off the foundations of Nasrallah,[8] though the original organization had gradually started to disintegrate. In light of this, veteran insurgents and young intelligentsia from the Ogaden region within Siad Barre's government lobbied for Somalia to support the resumption of the armed struggle.[9] Following the toppling of Halie Selassie's imperial regime by the Derg military junta, the situation in the Ogaden deteriorated. In the same period, a severe drought gripped the Ogaden resulting in mass suffering. The Derg opted to suppress news of the situation in the region rather than provide relief, and under the junta military oppression in the region increased. As 1974 and 1975 drew on, pressure from Ogaden Somalis rapidly built on the government of Siad Barre.[10] By 1975, the Somali government had been convinced to aid the movement.[9] Significant reorganizations were made in this period, including the decision to choose a new name. There was a sharp debate over whether to name the organization the 'Ogaden' or 'Western Somali' liberation front, with the latter eventually prevailing as the choice.[8]

In January 1976, a general conference of Western Somali society was held 100 km north-west of Mogadishu. A twenty-five member committee was elected to lead the WSLF, and Abdullahi Hassan Mahmoud became its first leader when the organization was formerly founded at the conference. That same year, training camps were soon formed across the Ogaden and Somalia.[8] Despite the organizations clear emphasis on Somalis, the WSLF found support among Muslim Harari and Oromo populations.[11][12][13] Many Hararis joined the organization, with several such as Colonel Ezedin Yusuf in leading positions during the armed struggle.[14] According to WSLF accounts, a large number of the fronts younger guerrillas were Harari "boys and girls".[15][16][17][13] Ioan Lewis noted that Muslim Oromo support was significant to the WSLF, and extended into the command structure of the organization.[11]

Insurgency edit

The WSLF found its opportunity when the Derg overthrew Haile Selassie in 1974, and switched from American support to the Soviet Union. The initiation of guerrilla warfare occurred almost simultaneously in the northern and southern regions in the early months of 1976. By the year's end, it had expanded across southeastern Bale and Sidamo. The terrain, comprising partly arid scrubland and mountainous and wooded areas, was familiar to the fighters, and the local inhabitants were considered friendly. Infiltrating from various points in the Somali republic, the guerrillas moved rapidly across the rugged hills. Wherever they went, they dismantled the state presence by destroying government offices and systematically targeting police and civilian administration. In total there were fourth Brigades or in Somali "Afar Gaas" within the WSLF movement.[18] First Brigade was known as "Duufaan". Second Brigade was known as "Ahmed Gurey" and was the largest Brigade of the WSLF. Third Brigade was known as "Horyaal" and the Fourth Brigade was known as "Ciil Tire". Each brigade was assigned to enter different front in the Somali Region of Ethiopia.

In 1976, the Somali government set up a counterpart of WSLF to fight in the Oromo areas, calling it the Somali Abo Liberation Front (SALF), whose sphere of operations was in the provinces of Bale, Sidamo, and Arsi, where it advocated union with Somalia or the creation of an independent state. Wako Gutu and Shekih Hussein were some of the prominent Oromo nationalists who joined SALF, which soon surpassed the Oromo Liberation Army (OLF). Somalia equipped both groups with Soviet arms, and in early 1977 sent 3,000 soldiers from the Somali Army to fight as guerrillas with the WSLF.[19]

By early 1977, with the exception of towns strategically positioned on vital routes and intersections, the WSLF effectively controlled most of the Ogaden lowlands. The rebels employed hit-and-run tactics, targeting the Ethiopian army at its vulnerable points and then blending into a predominantly supportive or sympathetic local population. These tactics eroded the morale of the Ethiopian troops, compelling them to retreat to bunkers and camps. The Ethiopian army found itself confined to garrison towns, many of which were besieged. While any attempt to storm these garrison towns invited devastating firepower from the Ethiopian defenders, travel between towns became perilous. Military and civilian vehicles required armed escorts, often falling into ambushes or encountering land mines. On February 11, 1977, a notable ambush occurred near Horakelifo (between Degehabur and Jijiga), resulting in the death of 25 soldiers and officers, with another 24 wounded, and the destruction of armored cars and trucks. Around the same time, a police contingent was annihilated not far from Filtu. These disruptions to supply lines led to frequent transportation delays to the camps. In addition to affecting the morale of the troops, guerrilla actions aimed at sabotaging the economy also occurred. In the summer of 1977, WSLF fighters destroyed several important installations, and on June 1, they detonated the railway connecting the Ethiopian capital to the port of Djibouti. This crucial economic lifeline, normally handling 70 percent of Ethiopia's exports and 50 percent of her imports, remained out of commission until August.[20]

On June 1977, Siad Barre decided to intensify the war by involving the regular Somali forces. On June 13, 1977, approximately 5,000 SNA soldiers crossed the border, launching a coordinated attack on specific targets in the Ogaden. The soldiers had taken off their uniform insignia and disguised themselves as guerrillas for the operation. Under the command of SNA officers, the WSLF engaged in attacks on Ethiopian military positions, pounding Gode, Degehabur and Kebri Dahar with mortars and rockets. However, the offensive was repulsed with heavy casualties. At Gode alone, 300 WSLF guerrillas and 14 high ranking SNA officers were killed. Dissent among the army, especially among the Ogaden clan, became vocal. After this disastrous offensive, the decision was made to invade Ethiopia to support the WSLF.[21]

Ogaden War edit

On July 13, 1977, the Somali army invaded Ethiopia. The Somali government refused to declare war, instead insisting that in the media that all the military actions were taken by the WSLF. The WSLF engaged in sabotage actions, impairing the mobility of the Ethiopian army. By September 1977, the Somali forces had overrun 90% of the Ogaden. The 2nd Brigade, Ahmed Gurey was the main strength of the WSLF during the war, they captured Jigjiga after 4 weeks of heavy fighting with the Ethiopia army.[22] Former Somali President Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed said "the WSLF brigades were very strong and united against all odds." during his interview with former BBC World Service report Abdisalan Harari.[23] This was claim backed by an interview with former Cuban leader Fidel Castro.[23] However, in early 1978 the Ethiopian government acquired a new arsenal of Soviet equipment and, spearheaded by Cuban combat troops, managed to push back the Somali incursion.

After the Ogaden War, the Ethiopian army only remained in full control of the Ogaden for a very brief period of time. Six months later, the WSLF was back in control of most of the countryside, and the army was confined to the towns and the roads. Sweeps and patrols in 1979 managed to reduce rebel activity, but failed to clear out the insurgents. By the end of the 70s, the WSLF was estimated to have an army of 18,000 men, thus becoming the second largest rebel group in Ethiopia, the first being the Eritrean People's Liberation Front (EPLF).[21]

Decline edit

In 1979, the Isaaq wing of the WSLF, Afraad, came into conflict with the main Ogaden clan forces of the WSLF. In early 1979, two WSLF fighters raped an Isaaq woman near Tog Wajaale, her teenage brother then retaliated by shooting the WSLF fighters dead, the commander of the WSLF unit then had the boy and some other members of his family executed. Shortly afterwards an Isaaq officer had 14 Ogaden WSLF members executed for harassing the local population. The next year, Issaq fighters killed 6 WSLF fighters and 13 Ogaden civilians near Werder, Ethiopia.[22]

On August 1980, the Derg regime launched a massive anti-insurgency campaign known as "Operation Lash" to clear the Ogaden of insurgents. The Ethiopian army deployed six divisions consisting of 60,000 men under the command of Merid Negussie. After stationing troops around the border of Somalia to block suspected entry and exit points, the Ethiopian forces moved in, dispersing, encircling and liquidating the rebels. The SALF disintegrated, whereas the WSLF managed to escape to northern Somalia. By December 1980, the Ogaden was completely cleared from insurgents.[21]

In 1981, the Mengistu regime began to support the Somali National Movement (SNM). The resulting war between the SNM and the WSLF was an important element in Ethiopian strategy, to exploit the clan divisions within Somali society and give the WSLF the final blow. From 1982 to 1984, the Somali National Movement (SNM) with support from the Ethiopian army, engaged in intense clashes with the WSLF in north western Somalia. In December 1984 the SNM launched an offensive that forced the WSLF out of its rear bases in northern Somalia. By January 1985, the WSLF had effectively ceased to exist.[22]

References edit

  1. ^ Davids, Jules (1965). The United States in world affairs, 1964. New York : Published for the Council on Foreign Relations by Harper & Row. pp. 284–286 – via Internet Archive.
  2. ^ Drysdale, John (1964). The Somali dispute. Frederick A. Praeger. pp. 70–71. OCLC 467147.
  3. ^ a b "The 1963 Rebellion in the Ogaden". Proceedings of the Second International Congress of Somali Studies. Vol. II: Archaeology and History. Helmut Buske Verlag. 1984. pp. 291–307. ISBN 3-87118-692-9.
  4. ^ Abdi 2021, p. 75.
  5. ^ Hagmann, Tobias (2014-10-02). "Punishing the periphery: legacies of state repression in the Ethiopian Ogaden". Journal of Eastern African Studies. 8 (4): 725–739. doi:10.1080/17531055.2014.946238. ISSN 1753-1055.
  6. ^ a b Politics and Violence in Eastern Africa: The Struggles of Emerging States. Taylor & Francis. 2017. pp. 191–192. ISBN 9781317539520.
  7. ^ Henze, Paul B.; Corporation, Rand (1986). Rebels and Separatists in Ethiopia: Regional Resistance to a Marxist Regime. Rand. p. 33. ISBN 978-0-8330-0696-7.
  8. ^ a b c d e Abdi 2021, p. 84.
  9. ^ a b Abdi 2021, p. 93-94.
  10. ^ Fitzgibbon, Louis (1982). The Betrayal of the Somalis. R. Collings. pp. 52–54. ISBN 9780860361947.
  11. ^ a b Lewis, Ioan M. (1998). Saints and Somalis: Popular Islam in a clan-based society. Lawrenceville, NJ: The Red Sea Press. pp. 99–100. ISBN 978-1-56902-103-3.
  12. ^ Matshanda, Namhla (2014). (PDF). The University of Edinburgh. p. 200. S2CID 157882043. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2020-01-31.
  13. ^ a b Waldron, Sidney (1978). Afocha A Link Between Community and Administration in Hārar, Ethiopia. Syracuse University. p. 88. ISBN 9780915984534.
  14. ^ Ylönen, Aleksi. The Horn Engaging the Gulf Economic Diplomacy and Statecraft in Regional Relations. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 118.
  15. ^ "Letter From Jeddah: An Interview With WSLF" (PDF). Horn of Africa. 1 (2): 8. April–June 1978.
  16. ^ History of Harar and Hararis (PDF). p. 172.
  17. ^ Teshale, Semir. Insurgency in Ethnically Divided Authoritarian-led Societies: A Comparative Study of Rebel Movements in Ethiopia, 1974–2014 (PDF). University of Toronto. p. 155.
  18. ^ Woldemariam, Michael (2018). Insurgent Fragmentation in the Horn of Africa. Cambridge University Press.
  19. ^ Waal, Alexander De (1991). Evil Days: Thirty Years of War and Famine in Ethiopia. Human Rights Watch. p. 74. ISBN 978-1-56432-038-4.
  20. ^ Tareke, Gebru (2016). The Ethiopian Revolution: War in the Horn of Africa. p. 642. ISBN 978-99944-951-2-2. OCLC 973809792.
  21. ^ a b c Tareke, Gebru (2009). The Ethiopian revolution: War in the Horn of Africa. ISBN 9780300156157.
  22. ^ a b c De Waal, Alexander (1991). Evil Days: Thirty Years of War and Famine in Ethiopia. Human Rights Watch.
  23. ^ a b Lewis, I. M (1994). Blood and Bone. Red Sea Press.

Bibliography edit

  • Abdi, Mohamed Mohamud (2021). A History of the Ogaden (Western Somali) Struggle for Self-Determination: Part I (1300–2007) (2nd ed.). UK: Safis Publishing. ISBN 978-1-906342-39-5. OCLC 165059930.

western, somali, liberation, front, somali, jabhadda, xoreynta, somali, galbeed, abbreviated, wslf, separatist, rebel, group, fighting, eastern, ethiopia, liberate, ogaden, region, from, ethiopian, control, played, major, role, ogaden, 1977, assisting, invadin. The Western Somali Liberation Front Somali Jabhadda Xoreynta Somali Galbeed abbreviated WSLF was a separatist rebel group fighting in eastern Ethiopia to liberate the Ogaden region from Ethiopian control It played a major role in the Ogaden War of 1977 78 assisting the invading Somali Army Western Somali Liberation FrontJabhadda Xoreynta Somali GalbeedFlag of the Western Somali Liberation FrontDates of operation1973 1985Active regionsOgadenSize30 000 1977 18 000 1980 AlliesSomaliaOpponentsEthiopiaBattles and warsEthiopian Civil WarOgaden War Contents 1 Background 1 1 1963 uprising 2 History 2 1 Formation 2 2 Insurgency 2 3 Ogaden War 2 4 Decline 3 References 4 BibliographyBackground editAfter World War II Somali leaders in the Ogaden region of Ethiopia persistently advocated for self determination yet their pleas were consistently disregarded by both Ethiopia and the United Nations 1 In the post war period the British handed over the Ogaden to Haile Selassie s government The region had been nominally under the rule of the Ethiopian Empire since Menelik s expansions in the late 1800s Additionally the British also handed over lands east of Jigjiga that had never been administered by the Ethiopian Empire 2 1963 uprising edit Main article 1963 Ogaden Rebellion During the late 1940s and 1950 s covert Somali organizations in the Ogaden formed with the aim of freeing the region from Ethiopian rule 3 4 In 1963 the first major rebellion in the region broke out Known as Nasrallah or the Ogaden Liberation Front the organization began with 300 men and soon swelled to 3 000 5 6 The Ethiopian Imperial Army launched a large scale counterinsurgency campaign during the summer and fall of 1963 The imperial governments reprisals during the counterinsurgency campaign which consisted large scale artillery bombardments of Somali cities in the Ogaden resulted in rapidly deteriorating relations between the Ethiopian Empire and the Somali Republic eventually resulting the 1964 Border War 6 3 In the years following insurgent activity continued but declined over the late 1960 s due to pressures from both the Ethiopian and Somali governments The Nasrallah insurgents formed the foundation of the future Western Somali Liberation Front 7 8 Between 1965 and 1975 Nasrallah began emphasizing on building the political and diplomatic groundwork for another liberation struggle The organization opened an office in Mogadishu and in sympathetic Arab states such as Iraq and Syria 8 History editFormation edit The early 1970 s saw the Ogaden liberation movement continue to gain momentum off the foundations of Nasrallah 8 though the original organization had gradually started to disintegrate In light of this veteran insurgents and young intelligentsia from the Ogaden region within Siad Barre s government lobbied for Somalia to support the resumption of the armed struggle 9 Following the toppling of Halie Selassie s imperial regime by the Derg military junta the situation in the Ogaden deteriorated In the same period a severe drought gripped the Ogaden resulting in mass suffering The Derg opted to suppress news of the situation in the region rather than provide relief and under the junta military oppression in the region increased As 1974 and 1975 drew on pressure from Ogaden Somalis rapidly built on the government of Siad Barre 10 By 1975 the Somali government had been convinced to aid the movement 9 Significant reorganizations were made in this period including the decision to choose a new name There was a sharp debate over whether to name the organization the Ogaden or Western Somali liberation front with the latter eventually prevailing as the choice 8 In January 1976 a general conference of Western Somali society was held 100 km north west of Mogadishu A twenty five member committee was elected to lead the WSLF and Abdullahi Hassan Mahmoud became its first leader when the organization was formerly founded at the conference That same year training camps were soon formed across the Ogaden and Somalia 8 Despite the organizations clear emphasis on Somalis the WSLF found support among Muslim Harari and Oromo populations 11 12 13 Many Hararis joined the organization with several such as Colonel Ezedin Yusuf in leading positions during the armed struggle 14 According to WSLF accounts a large number of the fronts younger guerrillas were Harari boys and girls 15 16 17 13 Ioan Lewis noted that Muslim Oromo support was significant to the WSLF and extended into the command structure of the organization 11 Insurgency edit The WSLF found its opportunity when the Derg overthrew Haile Selassie in 1974 and switched from American support to the Soviet Union The initiation of guerrilla warfare occurred almost simultaneously in the northern and southern regions in the early months of 1976 By the year s end it had expanded across southeastern Bale and Sidamo The terrain comprising partly arid scrubland and mountainous and wooded areas was familiar to the fighters and the local inhabitants were considered friendly Infiltrating from various points in the Somali republic the guerrillas moved rapidly across the rugged hills Wherever they went they dismantled the state presence by destroying government offices and systematically targeting police and civilian administration In total there were fourth Brigades or in Somali Afar Gaas within the WSLF movement 18 First Brigade was known as Duufaan Second Brigade was known as Ahmed Gurey and was the largest Brigade of the WSLF Third Brigade was known as Horyaal and the Fourth Brigade was known as Ciil Tire Each brigade was assigned to enter different front in the Somali Region of Ethiopia In 1976 the Somali government set up a counterpart of WSLF to fight in the Oromo areas calling it the Somali Abo Liberation Front SALF whose sphere of operations was in the provinces of Bale Sidamo and Arsi where it advocated union with Somalia or the creation of an independent state Wako Gutu and Shekih Hussein were some of the prominent Oromo nationalists who joined SALF which soon surpassed the Oromo Liberation Army OLF Somalia equipped both groups with Soviet arms and in early 1977 sent 3 000 soldiers from the Somali Army to fight as guerrillas with the WSLF 19 By early 1977 with the exception of towns strategically positioned on vital routes and intersections the WSLF effectively controlled most of the Ogaden lowlands The rebels employed hit and run tactics targeting the Ethiopian army at its vulnerable points and then blending into a predominantly supportive or sympathetic local population These tactics eroded the morale of the Ethiopian troops compelling them to retreat to bunkers and camps The Ethiopian army found itself confined to garrison towns many of which were besieged While any attempt to storm these garrison towns invited devastating firepower from the Ethiopian defenders travel between towns became perilous Military and civilian vehicles required armed escorts often falling into ambushes or encountering land mines On February 11 1977 a notable ambush occurred near Horakelifo between Degehabur and Jijiga resulting in the death of 25 soldiers and officers with another 24 wounded and the destruction of armored cars and trucks Around the same time a police contingent was annihilated not far from Filtu These disruptions to supply lines led to frequent transportation delays to the camps In addition to affecting the morale of the troops guerrilla actions aimed at sabotaging the economy also occurred In the summer of 1977 WSLF fighters destroyed several important installations and on June 1 they detonated the railway connecting the Ethiopian capital to the port of Djibouti This crucial economic lifeline normally handling 70 percent of Ethiopia s exports and 50 percent of her imports remained out of commission until August 20 On June 1977 Siad Barre decided to intensify the war by involving the regular Somali forces On June 13 1977 approximately 5 000 SNA soldiers crossed the border launching a coordinated attack on specific targets in the Ogaden The soldiers had taken off their uniform insignia and disguised themselves as guerrillas for the operation Under the command of SNA officers the WSLF engaged in attacks on Ethiopian military positions pounding Gode Degehabur and Kebri Dahar with mortars and rockets However the offensive was repulsed with heavy casualties At Gode alone 300 WSLF guerrillas and 14 high ranking SNA officers were killed Dissent among the army especially among the Ogaden clan became vocal After this disastrous offensive the decision was made to invade Ethiopia to support the WSLF 21 Ogaden War edit On July 13 1977 the Somali army invaded Ethiopia The Somali government refused to declare war instead insisting that in the media that all the military actions were taken by the WSLF The WSLF engaged in sabotage actions impairing the mobility of the Ethiopian army By September 1977 the Somali forces had overrun 90 of the Ogaden The 2nd Brigade Ahmed Gurey was the main strength of the WSLF during the war they captured Jigjiga after 4 weeks of heavy fighting with the Ethiopia army 22 Former Somali President Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed said the WSLF brigades were very strong and united against all odds during his interview with former BBC World Service report Abdisalan Harari 23 This was claim backed by an interview with former Cuban leader Fidel Castro 23 However in early 1978 the Ethiopian government acquired a new arsenal of Soviet equipment and spearheaded by Cuban combat troops managed to push back the Somali incursion After the Ogaden War the Ethiopian army only remained in full control of the Ogaden for a very brief period of time Six months later the WSLF was back in control of most of the countryside and the army was confined to the towns and the roads Sweeps and patrols in 1979 managed to reduce rebel activity but failed to clear out the insurgents By the end of the 70s the WSLF was estimated to have an army of 18 000 men thus becoming the second largest rebel group in Ethiopia the first being the Eritrean People s Liberation Front EPLF 21 Decline edit In 1979 the Isaaq wing of the WSLF Afraad came into conflict with the main Ogaden clan forces of the WSLF In early 1979 two WSLF fighters raped an Isaaq woman near Tog Wajaale her teenage brother then retaliated by shooting the WSLF fighters dead the commander of the WSLF unit then had the boy and some other members of his family executed Shortly afterwards an Isaaq officer had 14 Ogaden WSLF members executed for harassing the local population The next year Issaq fighters killed 6 WSLF fighters and 13 Ogaden civilians near Werder Ethiopia 22 On August 1980 the Derg regime launched a massive anti insurgency campaign known as Operation Lash to clear the Ogaden of insurgents The Ethiopian army deployed six divisions consisting of 60 000 men under the command of Merid Negussie After stationing troops around the border of Somalia to block suspected entry and exit points the Ethiopian forces moved in dispersing encircling and liquidating the rebels The SALF disintegrated whereas the WSLF managed to escape to northern Somalia By December 1980 the Ogaden was completely cleared from insurgents 21 In 1981 the Mengistu regime began to support the Somali National Movement SNM The resulting war between the SNM and the WSLF was an important element in Ethiopian strategy to exploit the clan divisions within Somali society and give the WSLF the final blow From 1982 to 1984 the Somali National Movement SNM with support from the Ethiopian army engaged in intense clashes with the WSLF in north western Somalia In December 1984 the SNM launched an offensive that forced the WSLF out of its rear bases in northern Somalia By January 1985 the WSLF had effectively ceased to exist 22 References edit Davids Jules 1965 The United States in world affairs 1964 New York Published for the Council on Foreign Relations by Harper amp Row pp 284 286 via Internet Archive Drysdale John 1964 The Somali dispute Frederick A Praeger pp 70 71 OCLC 467147 a b The 1963 Rebellion in the Ogaden Proceedings of the Second International Congress of Somali Studies Vol II Archaeology and History Helmut Buske Verlag 1984 pp 291 307 ISBN 3 87118 692 9 Abdi 2021 p 75 Hagmann Tobias 2014 10 02 Punishing the periphery legacies of state repression in the Ethiopian Ogaden Journal of Eastern African Studies 8 4 725 739 doi 10 1080 17531055 2014 946238 ISSN 1753 1055 a b Politics and Violence in Eastern Africa The Struggles of Emerging States Taylor amp Francis 2017 pp 191 192 ISBN 9781317539520 Henze Paul B Corporation Rand 1986 Rebels and Separatists in Ethiopia Regional Resistance to a Marxist Regime Rand p 33 ISBN 978 0 8330 0696 7 a b c d e Abdi 2021 p 84 a b Abdi 2021 p 93 94 Fitzgibbon Louis 1982 The Betrayal of the Somalis R Collings pp 52 54 ISBN 9780860361947 a b Lewis Ioan M 1998 Saints and Somalis Popular Islam in a clan based society Lawrenceville NJ The Red Sea Press pp 99 100 ISBN 978 1 56902 103 3 Matshanda Namhla 2014 Centres in the Periphery Negotiating Territoriality and Identification in Harar and Jijiga from 1942 PDF The University of Edinburgh p 200 S2CID 157882043 Archived from the original PDF on 2020 01 31 a b Waldron Sidney 1978 Afocha A Link Between Community and Administration in Harar Ethiopia Syracuse University p 88 ISBN 9780915984534 Ylonen Aleksi The Horn Engaging the Gulf Economic Diplomacy and Statecraft in Regional Relations Bloomsbury Publishing p 118 Letter From Jeddah An Interview With WSLF PDF Horn of Africa 1 2 8 April June 1978 History of Harar and Hararis PDF p 172 Teshale Semir Insurgency in Ethnically Divided Authoritarian led Societies A Comparative Study of Rebel Movements in Ethiopia 1974 2014 PDF University of Toronto p 155 Woldemariam Michael 2018 Insurgent Fragmentation in the Horn of Africa Cambridge University Press Waal Alexander De 1991 Evil Days Thirty Years of War and Famine in Ethiopia Human Rights Watch p 74 ISBN 978 1 56432 038 4 Tareke Gebru 2016 The Ethiopian Revolution War in the Horn of Africa p 642 ISBN 978 99944 951 2 2 OCLC 973809792 a b c Tareke Gebru 2009 The Ethiopian revolution War in the Horn of Africa ISBN 9780300156157 a b c De Waal Alexander 1991 Evil Days Thirty Years of War and Famine in Ethiopia Human Rights Watch a b Lewis I M 1994 Blood and Bone Red Sea Press Bibliography editAbdi Mohamed Mohamud 2021 A History of the Ogaden Western Somali Struggle for Self Determination Part I 1300 2007 2nd ed UK Safis Publishing ISBN 978 1 906342 39 5 OCLC 165059930 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Western Somali Liberation Front amp oldid 1206832179, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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