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Somalia's Al Shabab Islamists are on the run

But the Somali officials, backed by international forces, are too busy fighting among themselves to govern.

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Omar Faruk/Reuters
Djiboutian soldiers arrive as part of the African Union peacekeepers for Somalia (AMISOM), at the Adan Abdulle International airport in Somalia's capital Mogadishu, December 20, 2011. AMISOM is an African Union force that has been largely responsible for keeping al Shabaab from ousting Somalia's internationally-backed but weak government.

With more and more African Union countries sending peacekeeping聽troops to Somalia, and with聽the militant group Al Shabab clearly on the retreat, it might appear that Somalia鈥檚 future is finally starting to look bright.

Bright is too strong a word, of course. Much of Somalia remains in the grip of a famine. Its coastline is a haven for pirates, smugglers, and criminal gangs. Military incursions by Kenya and Ethiopia will almost inevitably take a heavy toll among civilians as they fight groups like Al Shabab. And the Somali government, responsible for creating a stable, workable society after the militant groups are defeated, seems barely able to carry on a conversation with itself without getting into a fistfight.

Yet after years of neglect, Somalia is finally getting international attention, and the flurry of diplomatic and military activities does provide some hope that Somalia may finally pull itself out of a 20-year period of civil war, anarchy, and dysfunction.

The greatest activity appears to be on the military front.

In the east, Ethiopian troops have taken the central Somali town of Beledweyne, a key transport hub on the road to Mogadishu. Residents in the villages outside of Beledweyne say that to join them and halt the Ethiopian advance, but with one of the strongest armies on the continent, Ethiopia is unlikely to face much of a challenge if it intends to carry on toward Mogadishu.

Ethiopia has been this way before, occupying Somalia briefly, from July 2006 to August 2008, after overthrowing the Islamic Courts Union, a coalition of religious parties intent on imposing shariah law in Somalia.

In the south, the once more 鈥 they launched their incursion into Somalia in mid-October but have been slowed down by heavy rains 鈥 and appear to be moving in on the Shabab-held town of Afmadow. Afmadow is the largest town between the Kenyan Army and the Shabab headquarters in Kismayo, a large southern trading port where Shabab derives much of its income by controlling the smuggling trade.

How to find a solution in the middle of a fist fight?

But in Mogadishu itself, as AU peacekeepers continue to arrive 鈥 the latest being 200 troops from tiny Djibouti 鈥 the fragile Transitional Federal Government that the AU intends to support is busy fighting itself over who is in charge.

On Wednesday, a supporting and opposing the parliament speaker, Sharif Hassan. Somali President Sharif Sheikh Ahmed supports Sharif Hassan, but his supporters are in the minority and were forced to flee parliament by the opposition, who apparently were using tables and chairs as weapons. Four parliamentarians were reportedly hospitalized, according to Garowe news agency. It was the fourth brawl in parliament since December.

A government divided against itself at war time is never a good thing. Yet Somalia鈥檚 neighbors seem determined to create an overall African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM) within the next few months, both to support the Somali government, and to expel what they see as a common terrorist threat of Al Shabab.

Rooting out militant groups may be seen as crucial to regional security by Somalia鈥檚 neighbors, but finding a political solution for Somalia is also seen as the only way to end what is most certainly the world鈥檚 worst humanitarian disaster.

At present, from the UN鈥檚 World Food Program, and at least an equal number of Somalis are thought to be in need during what is the worst famine in more than 20 years.聽

An additional 500,000 Somalis receive food assistance in Kenya鈥檚 Dadaab refugee camps.聽War prevents many of these people from remaining at home, planting crops, raising livestock, and breaking themselves from dependence on foreign aid.

Adding to the burden

The taint of terrorism 鈥 Al Shabab claims to have links with Al Qaeda 鈥 has added an even bigger burden.

US-based banks have been forced to halt the practice of sending remittances from diaspora Somalis back home to their relatives in Somalia, out of fear that some of that money may end up in the hands of Al Shabab. The problem, US law enforcement agencies say, is that the method for sending money 鈥 a traditional money transfer system called 鈥hawala鈥 鈥 is difficult to monitor, and is often used by terror groups. Aid groups argue that stopping the flow of remittances 鈥 money donations sent by expatriate Somalis to their relatives 鈥 during a humanitarian crisis will hit civilians the hardest.

Oxfam America鈥檚 Shannon Scribner said in a statement that the .

"It is estimated that $100m in remittances goes to Somalia from the US every year. This is the worst time for this service to stop. Any gaps with remittance flows in the middle of the famine could be disastrous," said Scribner.

Ken Menkhaus, a Somalia expert and associate professor at Davidson College, says the famine in Somalia would have been 鈥渕uch worse鈥 if Somali families living abroad didn鈥檛 have the ability to send home money to keep relatives alive.

鈥淭he 2011 famine in Somalia would have been far worse had it not been for the extraordinary mobilization of remittances sent by the Somali Diaspora to both their extended families and to local charities -- and all those remittances were sent through the hawala system,鈥 Mr. Menkhaus said in the joint statement with Oxfam.

It's a complicated mess, to be sure, but 20 years of civil war in Somalia should be enough evidence that ignoring the problem doesn't make it go away.聽

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