Alliance for the Re-liberation of Somalia
Alliance for the Re-liberation of Somalia, ARS | |
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Participant in Somali Civil War | |
Active | September 2007–January 2009 |
Ideology | Militant Islam, Sunni Islamism, Somali nationalism |
Groups | Mainly Hawiya |
Leaders |
Sheikh Sharif Ahmed Hassan Dahir Aweys |
Headquarters |
Asmara (Sep. 2007–Jan. 2009) Djibouti (June 2008–Jan. 2009) |
Area of operations | Southern and Central Somalia |
Originated as | Islamic Courts Union |
Became |
TFG Hizbul Islam |
Allies | TFG, AMISOM |
Opponents | al-Shabaab, Ras Kamboni Brigades, JABISO, Foreign Mujahedeen |
The Alliance for the Re-liberation of Somalia (ARS) was an Islamist organization based in the Horn of Africa. It was created in September 2007, when members of the Islamic Courts Union and Somali opposition leaders met in Asmara, the capital of Eritrea, and united to oppose Somalia's Transitional Federal Government (TFG) and the latter's Ethiopian allies. The group was active until January 2009, when ARS members were formally incorporated into the TFG parliament following a peace agreement.
Profile
The ARS was formed in 2007 after roughly 400 delegates, including former Islamic Courts Union Shura chairman Sheikh Hassan Dahir Aweys, ICU Executive chairman Sharif Sheikh Ahmad, former TFG Speaker of Parliament Sharif Hassan Sheikh Aden, and the former TFG Deputy Prime Minister Hussein Mohamed Farrah, approved a constitution and central committee. It aimed to remove the Ethiopian-backed government through either negotiation or force.
The Alliance had a 191-member Central Committee chaired by Sharif Hassan Sheikh Aden, and a 10-member Executive Committee chaired by Sharif Sheikh Ahmad. Former ICU leader Sheikh Hassan Dahir Aweys explicitly stated he did not hold any formal position in the Alliance. Islamists held 45% of the seats, ex-MPs 25%, and the rest of the organization's seats were held by representatives of the diaspora and civil society.[1]
In May 2008, the Alliance suffered internal splits and in-fighting between its more radical and moderate Islamist members over holding peace talks with the official Somalian government.[2]
The Djibouti peace agreement
Between May 31 and June 9, 2008, representatives of Somalia's Transitional Federal Government and the Alliance for the Re-liberation of Somalia participated in a peace conference in Djibouti mediated by the United Nations Special Envoy to Somalia, Ahmedou Ould-Abdallah. The conference ended with the announcement on June 9, 2008 that they had signed an 11-point peace agreement paving the way for "the cessation of all armed confrontation" across Somalia. The peace agreement called for a 90-day ceasefire and set a withdrawal timetable for the Ethiopian troops protecting the TFG. According to the agreement, the two sides agreed to terminate "all acts of armed confrontation" and to "request the United Nations...to authorize and deploy an international stabilization force from countries that are friends of Somalia" excluding the neighboring countries. The peace pact also called for the withdrawal of Ethiopian troops present in Somalia within a period of 120 days of the signing of this agreement. Both Somali Prime Minister Nur Hassan Hussein and ARS Chairman Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmad welcomed the peace agreement as an "historic opportunity" to end Somalia's long conflict. However, ICU leader Sheikh Hassan Dahir Aweys rejected the agreement, arguing that "no one authorized" the ARS delegates to participate at the Djibouti conference.[3]
References
- ↑ "BBC NEWS - Africa - Somali insurgents attack police". News.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 15 October 2014.
- ↑ "Somali Opposition Splits Amid Conflict". Voanews.com. Retrieved 15 October 2014.
- ↑ Archived August 2, 2008, at the Wayback Machine.
External links
War in Somalia (2006–09) | ||
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Background | Events | Key players |
Military:
Political: |
Timeline: 2006
Timeline: 2007
Timeline: 2008 Timeline: 2009 Continuation of the conflict: |