Issue No. 569

Published 24 Jul 2023

Baidoa blockade lifted

Published on 24 Jul 2023 5:12 min

Baidoa Blockade Lifted

Baidoa’s blockade has ended. Four days of reported negotiations between Al-Shabaab (AS) and the city’s business community concluded the 10-day siege on 20 July. Commercial goods are flowing again, but not before AS reasserted its strength and displayed its willingness to subject a city’s population to dire humanitarian and economic conditions. Baidoa’s humanitarian situation was quickly deteriorating, but equally worrying was the relative indifference of the South West State administration. Its half-hearted attempt to lift the blockade did little to alleviate pressure on the city.
 
After 10 days, the blockade on Baidoa’s population was reaching an intolerable level. The Baidoa Electric Company, in control of much of the city’s power, revised 24-hour access due to fuel shortages, restricting power from 8am to 3pm, and 6pm to 1am. One resident who runs a roadside tea business in Baido said “a person like me cannot endure this dire situation for long.” Fuel prices had sky-rocketed as high as USD 2 a litre. Its vast internally displaced persons (IDP) population, estimated at 600,000, was extremely dependent on aid that had been cut off by the blockade.
 
President Abdiaziz Laftagareen’s South West State administration claimed credit for ending the blockade. They claimed that the Somali National Army (SNA) and SWS forces destroyed two AS checkpoints, which forced the reopening of the shuttered Main Supply Route from Mogadishu to Baidoa. These checkpoints, near El Bashir and Jameco Cabdi-Guray in Burhakaba district in the Bay region, were attacked on 20 July by SNA and SWS forces, reportedly killing 25 militants. The SWS administration also hinted it was preparing to target Mooda-Moode, an AS-controlled area being used to establish checkpoints. But the hit-and-run attacks on just two AS checkpoints likely did little to end the siege. If South West State and SNA forces had simply continued their piecemeal attacks on AS, it is unlikely the blockade would have ended.
 
Instead, Baidoa’s business leaders and AS leaders negotiated an end to the blockade. The business representatives insisted that they had always paid AS taxes, as well as other requirements imposed by the militant group. The business community also told AS that the city’s leadership was less affected by the blockade than the overall population and IDPs, as leaders’ families reside elsewhere. Al-Shabaab, seemingly content with its display of force and its assertion of power over Baidoa, then ended the blockade.
 
Al-Shabaab’s deep infiltration throughout southern and central Somalia has allowed it to enforce its costly demands on the civilian population regardless of government presence. South West State’s administration claims control of 14 districts in the region. In reality, it controls some urban locales in those 14 districts, while AS controls their rural areas and four districts entirely. And of the 10 districts that make up the Bay and Bakool regions, just three have not been blockaded before. The other 7 have seen repeated blockades, forcing residents to receive aid and goods via airlift or donkey cart. The three that have not been blockaded are Burhakaba, Baidoa and Berdale, all due to their location on a critical route that connects Mogadishu to the Kenyan and Ethiopian borders. AS’ calculus changed in SWS when the administration detained head teachers who were then forced to pay a monthly tax of USD 300.
 
South West State’s administration led by President Abdiaziz Laftagareen appeared almost indifferent to this reality. His administration’s rhetoric on fighting Al-Shabaab seems almost empty. Very little has been done to actively combat AS presence in the region. Laftagareen, in power for over four years now, has conducted no sizeable operations against the militant group. Perhaps it is in his interest to have such a significant AS presence there. It diminishes the potential for SWS opposition to challenge him when he can claim the need for emergency response. The siege on Baidoa, only lifted after local negotiations with AS, has revealed the emptiness of South West State’s claims.
 
Baidoa’s population, which had already suffered so much, was again subjected to brutal intimidation and harsh conditions. The lifting of the siege will hopefully alleviate the humanitarian situation somewhat, but AS has reasserted control over the city. The unwillingness of the South West State administration to exert significant pressure towards ending the siege may have emboldened the militant group. If this is the administration’s response to a siege on a major city, it does not bode well for its engagement in the upcoming offensive against Al-Shabaab in SWS.
 
The Somali Wire team

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