The US
Secretary of State has arrived in Mogadishu, the first ever to do so. Kerry
hailed the progress made against al-Shabab, but did not venture further than
the airport amidst security concerns.
Deutsche Welle, 5 May 2015
In a show
of solidarity with a Somalia that is "turning around" in the fight
against al Qaeda-linked militants after decades of war, US Secretary of State
John Kerry made an unannounced visit to Somalia on Tuesday, a historical first.
The US has
assisted the Somali government by carrying out drone strikes against the
al-Shabab jihadists, but Kerry's trip is the highest-level visit from the US
since the 'Black Hawk Down' incident in 1993 that left 18 Americans dead.
Indeed, although Kerry praised the progress Mogadishu has made, the fact that
his entire trip took place at the airport highlighted just how unstable thenation remains.
Indeed, the
secretary of state spent only three hours at Mogadishu before flying off to
Kenya.
"The
next time I come, we have to be able to just walk downtown," Kerry said to
President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud. Downtown, the president answered, "is
very different now."
Turning the
tide against the terrorists
The
terrorist activity has left Somalia without a government that can operate
nationwide for two and a half decades. However, African forces combined with
American airstrikes have crippled the al-Shabab leadership in recent years,
their territory has been drastically reduced and their cash flow hindered.
"Over
the past quarter century, you have known immense suffering from violence, from
criminals, from sectarian strife, from dire shortages of food, and from an
inability to remain safely even within your villages and homes," Kerry
said in his address, adding "I visited Somalia today because your country
is turning around."
The push
back against al-Shabab has however also had the negative consequence of causing
the terrorists to expand their efforts in neighboring countries such as Kenya.
Last month, a massacre at Kenya's Garissa University College killed 148 people,
mostly students.

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