The Fight Against Al Shabaab
With the ousting of Somalia?s long-time dictator, Siad Barre, in 1991, few could have predicted that for the next two decades the country would be in an almost permanent state of civil war. Born amongst this anarchy, al Shabaab came into being after the defeat of Somalia?s Islamic Courts Union (ICU) by the country?s Transitional Federal Government and its Ethiopian backed forces. Representing the more radical arm of the ICU, al Shabaab immediately set to work fighting off what it saw as the foreign invaders.
Allied to al Qaeda and branding its own form of radical Islam, al Shabaab is notorious for imposing a particularly oppressive form of rule in the areas it controls. This not only includes the banning of many forms of entertainment, such as football, but also imposing harsh punishments to anyone who breaks its rules.
In 2007, with the Ethiopians? withdrawal from Mogadishu, Uganda, as part of the African Union, landed in Mogadishu to a find a city in chaos and began the slow job of taking it back. Almost eight years later, the African Union Mission in Somalia ? now composed of more than six troop-contributing countries ? has succeeded in not only ousting al Shabaab from Mogadishu, but also from most of the country.
The Fight Against Al Shabaab
With the ousting of Somalia?s long-time dictator, Siad Barre, in 1991, few could have predicted that for the next two decades the country would be in an almost permanent state of civil war. Born amongst this anarchy, al Shabaab came into being after the defeat of Somalia?s Islamic Courts Union (ICU) by the country?s Transitional Federal Government and its Ethiopian backed forces. Representing the more radical arm of the ICU, al Shabaab immediately set to work fighting off what it saw as the foreign invaders.
Allied to al Qaeda and branding its own form of radical Islam, al Shabaab is notorious for imposing a particularly oppressive form of rule in the areas it controls. This not only includes the banning of many forms of entertainment, such as football, but also imposing harsh punishments to anyone who breaks its rules.
In 2007, with the Ethiopians? withdrawal from Mogadishu, Uganda, as part of the African Union, landed in Mogadishu to a find a city in chaos and began the slow job of taking it back. Almost eight years later, the African Union Mission in Somalia ? now composed of more than six troop-contributing countries ? has succeeded in not only ousting al Shabaab from Mogadishu, but also from most of the country.