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Somalia rallies grassroots to oppose jihadist Al Shabab. Will it work?

When he went to a remote desert village near Somalia’s front lines with Al Shabab, parliament member Malik Abdalla was driven to act by images of jihadist atrocities against civilians. His goal: to mobilize villagers to support the most serious effort to date to take on Al Shabab’s 15-year insurgency.

His winning argument, as he sought to overcome villagers’ suspicions after decades of government neglect, was to set aside clan differences and champion the fight against their common enemy. It was time to embrace cooperation, he told them.

Why We Wrote This

Somalia has made surprising progress in its campaign against Al Shabab. Convincing its people that the jihadis are the enemy hasn’t been hard. The challenge is maintaining unity and solidifying territorial gains.

Within four days, he had mobilized a local militia force that would grow to 600 men and women, opened a new front against Al Shabab, and demonstrated why the combined strength of Somali security units and clan militias have now recaptured more territory from the jihadis in five months than in the previous five years.

The growing popular backlash could have devastating consequences for Al Shabab, which portrays its fight as a religious duty and so far has retaliated harshly.

“It’s very simple: Al Shabab has taken extreme measures. … They have been squeezing, squeezing, squeezing,” says Abdisalam Guled, former deputy director of intelligence for Somalia. “I think they went beyond limits that people can tolerate.”

Set in the middle of no man’s land, the desert village of Qoryaale had no presence of Somalia security forces, and Islamist Al Shabab militants were very close by.

Which is why Somali parliament member Malik Abdalla – driven to act by images of Al Shabab atrocities against civilians, and armed with the new Somali government’s determination to wage “total war” against the jihadis – went there in early October.

His aim: to mobilize local clans to join the most serious effort to date to take on the Islamists and end their 15-year insurgency by fighting alongside the Somali National Army (SNA) and American-trained Somali Special Forces.

Why We Wrote This

Somalia has made surprising progress in its campaign against Al Shabab. Convincing its people that the jihadis are the enemy hasn’t been hard. The challenge is maintaining unity and solidifying territorial gains.

Using what he says was a loud voice, Mr. Abdalla called on village residents to bring out their guns and to overcome their suspicions after decades of government neglect, in a country beset by constant conflict and multiple droughts.

It was time to embrace cooperation and to fight back, he says he told them: “We cannot accept evil people telling us, ‘We will rule over you, and if you refuse, we will blow everything up.’”

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