Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed

Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed

Infobox_President
name = Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed
عبدالله يوسف أحمد


caption =
order = President of Somalia
primeminister = Muhammad Abdi Yusuf
Ali Muhammad Ghedi
Salim Aliyow Ibrow
Nur Hassan Hussein
vicepresident =
term_start = 14 October 2004
term_end =
predecessor = Abdiqasim Salad Hassan
successor =
birth_date = birth date and age|1934|12|15|df=y
birth_place = Galcaio, Mudug, Somalia
spouse =
party = TFG
religion = Islam

Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed ( _so. "Cabdullaahi Yuusuf Axmed", _ar. عبدالله يوسف أحمد) (born December 15 1934) is a veteran Somali politician, and the current transitional President of Somalia.

Ahmed was born in the town of Gaalkacyo, in the Mudug Region. He was elected as President of the Transitional Federal Government (TFG), by a session of the Transitional Federal Parliament (TFP) held in neighbouring Kenya's capital, Nairobi, on October 10 2004, and sworn in on October 14 2004.

He was among the first cadet officials sent to Italy in 1957, together with Mohamed Farrah Aidid and others.Fact|date=February 2007 Since then he remained in the Army and participated in the war of 1964 and the Ogaden War of 1977, and was decorated for bravery in both wars.Fact|date=February 2007 In 1978 Ahmed, together with a group of officials mostly from his own Majeerteen (Darod) clan, participated in a failed coup attempt against the regime of Siad Barre. He escaped to Kenya, then to Ethiopia where he started a rebel movement called SODAF which later became the Somali Salvation Democratic Front (SSDF).Fact|date=February 2007

Disagreements arose from Mr. Yusuf and his Ethiopian host when Somalia and Ethiopia signed 1984 a pact not support oppossing militias who were based on each other's country. For his refusal to obey Ethiopian generals, Mr. Yusuf was sent to jail where he served for five years until his release when the Dergue was overthrown in 1991.

Later he became President of Puntland state. In the 2004 election he defeated all the notable leaders of Somalia including Abdiqasim Salad Hassan, Cadow and all the warlords of Mogadishu. His government, backed by considerable Ethiopian forces, successfully defeated the Islamic Courts Union (ICU) led by Hassan Dahir Aweys. The Somali and Ethiopian forces marched into Mogadishu on the last day of 2006. However the Islamists regrouped and have reversed most of the gains the TFG and the Ethiopian forces made in December 2006. The Insurgency are a real threat to the Somali government who need the Ethiopian occupation to stay in power.

Career

Somali Salvation Democratic Front (SSDF)

In September 1978 Ahmed, as a former army officer in the Somali National Army (SNA), founded the SSDF, a guerrilla movement aimed at ousting the Somali dictator Siad Barre. [ [http://www.somaliatalk.com/2003/aug/xagar3103.html Waa Kuma Cabdullaahi Yuusuf?] ]

President of Puntland

In the 1990s Ahmed emerged as the pre-eminent leader of his native Puntland region; he declared the territory autonomous in 1998. On July 23 1998 he became the President of Puntland and served in this position until his term expired on July 1 2001. However, after this he continued to declare himself to be the President of Puntland and started a military campaign against the new leadership, which had elected Jama Ali Jama in November 2001. In May 2002 he gained control of Puntland's capital and was recognized as President of Puntland again, though rebellions continued until 2003. Ahmed then continued serving as President of Puntland until October 2004 when he resigned to become President of Somalia. He is said to have an authoritarian approach to leadership. [cite web | title=Gerard Prunier:Somalia: Civil War, intervention and withdrawal 1990–1995 (July1995), p.6 | work=WRITENET Country Papers, UK | url=http://www.asylumlaw.org/docs/somalia/country_conditions/Prunier.pdf | accessmonthday=1 January | accessyear=2006|format=PDF]

Implicated in extrajudicial killings

The United States Department of State, in its 2002 Country Report on Human Rights Practices, identifies milita members loyal to Ahmed as being responsible for at least two deliberate killings of non-combatants while he was president of the disputed regional state of Puntland:
* On January 11 2002, Garah Mohammed Said Gom'ad, a prominent businessman, was reportedly killed by forces of Yusuf Ahmed in a deliberate attack in which Yusuf's militia reportedly stopped his car and Gom'ad was fatally shot.
* On August 17 2002, Sultan Ahmed Mohammed Hurre, a British citizen, was killed by bodyguards in the employ of Yusuf Ahmed as their respective convoys passed each other approximately two miles south of the Puntland town of Garoowe. Hurre was known for opposing the extension of Ahmed's presidency in the state of Puntland; [cite news
title=Sultan Hurre Remembrance Day
url=http://www.somalilandtimes.net/sl/2005/239/17.shtml
date=2006-08-15
publisher=Somaliland Times
accessdate=2007-02-03
] according to the press reports, he was targeted by Ahmed for arrest as a religious extremist. Ahmed later claimed that the killing was accidental, but witnesses claimed otherwise.

The Country Report says that by the end of 2002 no action had been taken against those responsible for the killings. [ [http://www.historycentral.com/NationbyNation/Somalia/Human.html Country Reports on Human Rights Practices] ]

Militias associated with Yusuf Ahmed have also been implicated in the killings of Farah Mohamed Said ("Farah Dheere") in Garowe in 2002. [ [http://www.somaliuk.com/News/archive.php?month=8&year=2002 Somali UK] ]

Transitional Federal Government (TFG)

On October 10 2004, Ahmed was elected by the Transitional Federal Parliament to the position of President of Somalia. Ahmed got 189 votes from the TFG Parliament, while the closest contender got 79 votes. [ [http://www.somalitalk.com/2004/oct/10oct14.html C/laahi Yusuuf Axmed, Ayaa Ku Guulaystey Madaxweynaha Soomaaliya] ]

As President, he pledged to promote reconciliation and to set about rebuilding the country. However, his government has been plagued by internal disagreements and contentions with other power-holders in Somalia. For example, he was at loggerheads with some warlords and government members over where the administration should be based. The president and prime minister opposed a move to Mogadishu, citing security reasons. He helped to relocate the Transitional Federal Institutions (TFIs) along with his Prime Minister Ali Mohammed Ghedi and the Speaker of the Parliament Sharif Hassan Sheikh Aden from Nairobi to the cities of Jowhar and mainly Baidoa, where the TFG resided until the government took control of Mogadishu.

The make up of a possible foreign peacekeeping force – in particular the inclusion of Ethiopian troops – is another bone of contention. Ethiopia has been accused of backing rival Somali warlords in order to keep the country weak. The African Union Mission to Somalia (IGASOM) mission therefore excludes countries neighboring Somalia from participating in peacekeeping.

In May 2006, the Second Battle of Mogadishu started and CNN reported that there were Transitional government forces in action, but Ahmed told the BBC the alliance of warlords were not fighting on behalf of the government and threatened to fire them.cite news
url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/4768857.stm
title=Warring Somali ministers warned
date=2006-06-13
publisher=BBC
accessdate=2007-02-03
] Indeed, members of the government who were part of the warring Alliance for the Restoration of Peace and Counter-Terrorism (ARPCT) were sacked. Others left the government in disaffection after the victories of the Islamic Courts Union.

Assassination attempt

On September 18 2006, a suicide car bomber smashed his vehicle into the President's convoy outside the National Parliament in Baidoa. The attack killed four of the President's bodyguards, as well as the President's brother. Six attackers were also killed in the subsequent gun battle. The President's life was most likely saved by the fact that he travelled in the second vehicle in the convoy rather than the front one, a decoy. The Islamic Court's Union, which had recently taken control of much of the country were blamed for the attack. [cite web |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/5356126.stm
title=Somali leader survives bomb blast
publisher=BBC
date=2006-09-18
accessdate=2007-02-03
]

After the beginning of the War in Somalia on December 21, 2006, with the help of Ethiopia, the TFG forces took control of Somalia and the capital, Mogadishu, from the hands of the Islamic Courts Union. By 28 December the Transitional Federal Government captured Mogadishu as the ICU forces fled.

On January 8 2007 as the Battle of Ras Kamboni raged, TFG President Ahmed entered Mogadishu for the first time since being elected. It was announced the government would be relocated to Villa Somalia, in Mogadishu, from its interim location at Baidoa. This marks the first time since the fall of Siad Barre in 1991 that with the help of the Ethiopian troops, a Somali government controlled the most of the country except the breakaway republic of Somaliland in the north. How ever it wasn't to last. The Islamists regrouped and took back most of their territories. If the Ethiopian troops withdrew, the Somali government would collapse because its national army is not well trained.cite news
title=Somalia president visits Mogadishu after TFG victory
publisher=Garowe Online
date=2008-01-08
url=http://www.garoweonline.com/stories/publish/article_6960.shtml
accessdate=2007-01-08
]

Health problems

Yusuf underwent a liver transplant in the 1990s. In early December 2007 he was admitted to a hospital in Nairobi for treatment of what his spokesman described as bronchitis, [ [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7128502.stm "Somalia's leader 'has bronchitis'"] , BBC News, December 5, 2007.] and on January 4 2008 he collapsed in Baidoa and was taken to Ethiopia for treatment. [ [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7171370.stm "Somali interim leader collapses"] , BBC News, January 4, 2008.] Two days later, he was rushed to London for tests. [ [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7174701.stm "Sick Somali president in London"] , BBC News, January 7, 2008.] He returned to Mogadishu on February 16 2008; rebels promptly fired mortars at the presidential compound, reportedly wounding at least five people. [ [http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2008/02/17/africa/AF-GEN-Somalia.php "Mortar attack on Somali president's residence wounds five"] , Associated Press ("International Herald Tribune"), February 17, 2008.]

Notes


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