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How an intelligence officer’s disappearance in Somalia has ripped the government apart

The disappearance of a young intelligence officer in Somalia has led to a rapidly escalating power struggle between the president and prime minister that has torn the government apart and potentially gives new openings to al-Qaeda-linked militants.

Details of what happened to Ikran Tahlil Farah, a 25-year-old cybersecurity analyst, are still murky. But her abduction led President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed on Thursday to suspend the powers of the prime minister, who has accused him of obstructing justice in Tahlil’s case.

The political showdown risks becoming a security crisis, experts say, and has blown up any pretense that Somalia’s federal government is functioning. That could strengthen the hand of al-Shabab — which Somalia’s government has been fighting for years, aided by billions of dollars in security support from the United States.

“Anytime you have this level of political infighting, it benefits al-Shabab in so many ways,” said Omar Mahmood, senior Somalia analyst at the International Crisis Group. “This narrative paints into everything they say about the federal government. That it is ineffective, weak, divisive and provides nothing to the public. And it is hard to argue against that.”

Implications of the back-and-forth between the president, known by his nickname, Farmaajo, and Prime Minister Mohamed Hussein Roble rippled Friday across international borders. The president’s office accused neighboring Djibouti of illegally detaining the former head of the National Intelligence and Security Agency, Fahad Yasin, as he tried to board a flight to Mogadishu. Roble suspended Yasin — who is known as the president’s right-hand man — earlier this month in connection with Tahlil’s disappearance.

Djibouti’s foreign minister rejected the assertion by Somalia’s government, saying it was meant to “create confusion and drag Djibouti into Somalia internal challenges and crisis.”

“It’s time to start talking about more punitive measures from the international community to keep everyone in line before the election,” Mahmood said.

Among officials in Washington, there has been increased concern about the situation in Somalia since February, when gunfire broke out on the streets of the capital, Mogadishu, after the president did not hold scheduled elections. That raised questions about the depth of Somalia’s political instability — and about whether U.S. strategy needs to shift.

Al-Shabab controls most of Somalia’s interior and has about 10,000 active fighters in the country, experts believe, with a much larger network of supporters. An attack it launched in Kenya last year killed one U.S. service member and two American private contractors, according to a U.S. military statement. But the biggest risk al-Shabab poses, experts say, is to residents within Somalia and to its neighbors in the region, where attacks are regular.

Biden’s top intelligence official said Monday that the greatest terrorism threat to the United States does not come from Afghanistan but from countries including Somalia, Yemen, Syria and Iraq.

Rep. Michael McCaul (Tex.), the ranking Republican on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said he is closely monitoring current political divisions within Somalia and is “deeply concerned about the trajectory of the country.”

“With the withdrawal of U.S. forces from Somalia and an emboldened al-Qaeda network from the continued debacle in Afghanistan, al Shabaab is surely taking notes,” McCaul said in a statement. “They remain a dangerous and capable threat to U.S. interests and the homeland. Unfortunately, years of support to the Somali armed forces and billions of dollars of assistance has barely moved the needle toward lasting stability in the country.”

Facing intense pressure from the West after the violence in February and April, including threats of sanctions from Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Somalia’s president — once a U.S. Department of Transportation administrator in Buffalo — backed down and agreed to hold elections. Roble was tapped to lead the process in May.

It was not too long afterward — on June 26 — that the analyst Tahlil was abducted, said her mother, Qali Mohamud Guhad, in an interview. The last time she spoke with her daughter was via a WhatsApp call that night, Mohamud said. Tahlil told her that she was going to see the security chief, Yasin, who she said had been calling her all day.

The intelligence agency announced in early September that an investigation found that al-Shabab had killed Tahlil. But the terrorist group quickly denied it, saying it takes responsibility for attacks on intelligence officers and did not kill her.

Mohamud said she is still holding out hope that her daughter is alive somewhere in captivity. She said she does not know why Tahlil was abducted, but noted that her daughter had information about soldiers from Somalia who were rumored to have been sent by the government to fight in Ethiopia, which has been one of the many political weak spots for Somalia’s president.

Mohamud personally met this month with Roble, who she said assured her that he would take the steps necessary to achieve justice.

Roble’s decision to suspend Yasin — over the objections of the president — reportedly led this month to a brief military standoff, after each selected a different person to lead the intelligence agency. Roble’s spokesman, Mohamed Ibrahim Moalimuu, said in an interview Saturday that he views the president’s suspension of his powers as unconstitutional and that the prime minister is committed to seeing the elections through.

Matt Bryden, director of Sahan Research, a Somalia-focused think tank, said that al-Shabab’s strength is always in inverse proportion to the weakness of its adversaries.

“It fills a vacuum,” he said. “And this is a protracted vacuum.”

and Omar Faruk

 

Source- washingtonpos

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