By FRED OLUOCH
In Summary
- In October, it recaptured Barawe, the last remaining port under Al Shabaab, thereby starving the militants of the only remaining source of revenue.
- One of the key developments this year was the killing of Al Shabab leader Ahmed Abdi Godane by US drone strike in September, Godane has been replaced by Ahmad Omar.
Despite African peacekeepers’ successes in
Somalia in 2014 — routing Al Shabaab from their stronghold and starving
them of their sources of revenue — the unending changing of prime
minsters is a major worry.
Omar Abdirashid Ali Sharmarke replaced Abdiweli
Sheikh Ahmed as the prime minister on December 17, leaving analysts
wondering whether he will keep to the programme of national political
dialogue, a new constitution and elections in 2016.
Mr Sharmake has received overwhelming support
across the board, with the semi-autonomous region of Puntland describing
him as the most qualified in the current circumstances.
The new prime minster has a huge task ahead of
him, including bringing cohesion to the government, addressing security,
completing the constitution and creating federal state administrations
ahead of the 2016 elections.
Parliament had earlier voted out Mr Ahmed because
of differences with President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud over the composition
of the government.
However, 2014 has been a good year for Amisom. In
October, it recaptured Barawe, the last remaining port under Al Shabaab,
thereby starving the militants of the only remaining source of revenue.
One of the key developments this year was the
killing of Al Shabab leader Ahmed Abdi Godane by US drone strike in
September, Godane has been replaced by Ahmad Omar.
The militants carried out two of their most daring
attacks this year. They stormed the presidential palace in February and
attacked parliament in July, killing at least 10 people including an MP
and wounding several people.
In January, the semi-autonomous Somalia region of
Puntland confirmed Abdiweli Mohammed Ali Gaas, a former Somali prime
minister, as the region’s new leader, a major step in the strengthening
of the federal system.
In March, the UN Security Council extending the
partial lifting of the arms embargo on Somalia, allowing the delivery of
small arms and ammunition and the provision of assistance and training
to the security forces of the Federal Government of Somalia.
Amisom, operating with government forces,
recaptured several strategic towns in the southwest from Al Shabaab. The
operation was also to enable Amisom and Somali National Army to
stabilise captured territories. The same month, Amisom launched
“Operation Indian Ocean” to take the battle to Al Shabaab strongholds in
the rural areas.
In May, Al Shabaab attacked a restaurant in Djibouti — the first time this has happened in that country.
All in all, in June, China said it will re-open
its embassy in Mogadishu 23 years after evacuating its diplomats as
Somalia plunged into civil war.
Signs that Somalia was slowly edging towards
normalcy came in November when the government launched the country’s
first postal service in more than two decades. Mogadishu’s first ever
cash withdrawal machine was installed in a hotel.
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