Somalis likely to ignore Qaeda’s call: analysts

Says president is likely to save war-torn Somalia

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Al-Qaeda's rallying cry for an Islamist uprising in Somalia is likely to fall on deaf ears as its violent brand of opposition repels ordinary people and real hope now exists that the country's new leader can end 18 years of chaos, a report said on Friday.

Osama bin Laden's appeal on Thursday for Somalis to topple President Sheikh Sharif Ahmed is an attempt to boost spirits among increasingly unpopular Qaeda-aligned fighters, rather than a realistic political action plan, analysts told Reuters.

While bin Laden's local allies pose a real military menace, most Somalis appear to place more faith in the 42-year-old former teacher and his record of building community stability than they do in al-Qaeda's message of war, experts said.

"There is no possibility of that revolt happening. This is primarily designed to boost the morale of Shabaab," said Rashid Abdi, a Somali expert at the International Crisis Group.

"The statement shows al-Qaeda is ambitious in Somalia, but politically, Sharif Ahmed has the bulk of the country with him," he added.

There is no possibility of that revolt happening. This is primarily designed to boost the morale of Shabaab

Rashid Abdi, Somali expert

Ahmed for the future

Al Shabaab is a powerful al-Qaeda-aligned group of Islamist fighters who control large swathes of territory and, together with like-minded groups, are waging an insurgency against the fledgling administration and its foreign backers.

But set against this military threat is a profound sense among ordinary Somalis that Ahmed, a moderate Islamist elected at U.N.-hosted talks in Djibouti in January, represents the country's best chance in years of a new future.

Analysts say Ahmed has a real possibility of healing some of the worst rifts in the 10 million population given his Islamist roots and a feeling in the West that he should now be given a chance to try to stabilize the Horn of Africa nation.

"Bin Laden can pontificate all he wants, but that will not change this unfavorable political landscape for al Shabaab," Said Abdi Samatar, a Somalia scholar and professor of geography and global studies at the University of Minnesota.

Bin Laden can pontificate all he wants, but that will not change this unfavorable political landscape for al Shabaab

Somali scholar

Big dangers abound

"The will of the people is to say 'No' to war, and that is a major obstacle to bin Laden." Al Shabaab's main foe until the end of January was an Ethiopian occupation force sent into the country with tacit U.S. approval in 2006 to crush supposed al-Qaeda activity.

Ethiopia's presence provided the fighters with a nationalist raison d’être that many Somalis understood.

But the completion of the Ethiopian pull-out kicked away an important political prop and Shabaab appears to be struggling to remain a cohesive force in its absence, analysts said.

Big dangers do abound for Ahmed, not least the risk of assassination by Shabaab, which continues to receive funding from foreign sources and guards its secrets well—not easy in a garrulous society with a highly developed bush telegraph.

As yet, Ahmed has little in the way of military muscle: Government troops and some 3,500 African peacekeepers control just a few districts of Mogadishu.

Also, the new leader faces big challenges: Ending violence and piracy, building ties to the new U.S. administration, rebuilding roads and ports and keeping at bay predatory warlords and businessmen with an interest in minimizing state power.

Sharia law

But Ahmed's moderate Islamist roots may prove to be helpful in that task, and in a parallel effort to persuade some Arab states to provide funding for his administration.

He has said he backs sharia law for Somalia—a statement that could soften opposition to him among Islamist groups, although his brand of sharia is unlikely to the strictest form favored by Afghanistan's Taliban rebels.

The Ethiopians have gone, ending an occupation often seen in Washington as part of the "war on terror" but perceived locally as a blatant violation of Somali sovereignty.

"The new administration in Washington is not inclined to go the military route in Somalia," said David Shinn, a Horn of Africa analyst at George Washington University.

Somalia expert John Prendergast, co-chairman of the U.S.-based advocacy group the Enough Project, said the West's best policy options were diplomatic rather than military.

"The best thing the West could do would be to patiently support this unity government's attempts to win over the various constituencies in the country and to slowly and steady extend of state control," he said.

The best thing the West could do would be to patiently support this unity government's attempts to win over the various constituencies in the country

John Prendergast, Somalia expert