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<text id=93CT1855>
<link 91TT0276>
<link 91TT0111>
<link 91TT0045>
<title>
Somalia--History
</title>
<history>
Compact ALMANAC--CIA Factbook
Northern Africa
Somalia
</history>
<article>
<source>CIA World Factbook</source>
<hdr>
History
</hdr>
<body>
<p> Early history traces the development of Somali people to an
Arab sultanate, which was founded in the seventh century A.D. by
Koreishite immigrants from Yemen. During the 15th and 16th
centuries, Portuguese traders landed in present Somali territory
and ruled several coastal towns. The sultan of Zanzibar
subsequently took control of these towns and their surrounding
territory.
</p>
<p> Somalia's modern history began in the late 19th century, when
various European powers began to trade and establish themselves
in the area. The British East India Company's desire for
unrestricted harbor facilities led to the conclusion of treaties
with the sultan of Tajura as early as 1840. It was not until
1886, however, that the British gained control over northern
Somalia through treaties with various Somali chiefs who were
guaranteed British protection. British objectives centered on
safe-guarding trade links to the east and securing local sources
of food and provisions. The boundary between Ethiopia and
British Somaliland was established in 1897 through treaty
negotiations between British negotiators and King Menelik.
</p>
<p> During the first two decades of this century, British rule
was challenged through persistent attacks led by the Islamic
nationalist leader Mohamed Abdullah. A long series of
intermittent engagements and truces ended in 1920 when British
warplanes bombed Abdullah's stronghold at Taleex. Although
Abdullah was defeated as much by rival Somali factions as by
British forces, he was lauded as a popular hero and stands as a
major figure of Somali national identity.
</p>
<p> In 1885, Italy obtained commercial advantages in the area
from the sultan of Zanzibar and in 1889 concluded agreements
with the Sultans of Obbia and Caluula, who placed their
territories under Italy's protection. Between 1897 and 1908,
Italy made agreements with the Ethiopians and the British that
marked out the boundaries of Italian Somaliland. The Italian
Government assumed direct administration, giving the territory
colonial status.
</p>
<p> Italian occupation gradually extended inland. In 1924, the
Jubaland Province of Kenya, including the town and port of
Kismayo, was ceded to Italy by the United Kingdom. The
subjugation and occupation of the independent sultanates of
Obbia and Mijertein, begun in 1925, were completed in 1927. In
the late 1920s, Italian and Somali influence expanded into the
Ogaden region of eastern Ethiopia. Continuing incursions
climaxed in 1935 when Italian forces launched an offensive that
led to the capture of Addis Ababa and the Italian annexation of
Ethiopia in 1936.
</p>
<p> Following Italy's declaration of war on the United Kingdom in
June 1940, Italian troops overran British Somaliland and drove
out the British garrison. In 1941, British forces began
operations against the Italian East African Empire and quickly
brought the greater part of the Italian Somaliland under
British control. From 1941 to 1950, while Somalia was under
British military administration, transition toward
self-government was begun through the establishment of local
courts, planning committees, and the Protectorate Advisory
Council. In 1948, Britain turned the Ogaden and neighboring
Somali territories over to Ethiopia.
</p>
<p> In Article 23 of the 1947 peace treaty, Italy renounced all
rights and titles to Italian Somaliland. In accordance with
treaty stipulations, on September 15, 1948, the Four Powers
referred the question of disposal of former Italian colonies to
the UN General Assembly. On November 21, 1949, the General
Assembly adopted a resolution recommending that Italian
Somaliland be placed under an international trusteeship system
for 10 years, with Italy as the administering authority,
followed by independence for Italian Somaliland. In 1959, at the
request of the Somali Government, the UN General Assembly
advanced the date of independence from December 2 to July 1,
1960.
</p>
<p> Meanwhile, rapid progress toward self-government was being
made in British Somaliland. Elections for the Legislative
Assembly were held in February 1960, and one of the first acts
of the new legislature was to request that the United Kingdom
grant the area independence so that it could be united with
Italian Somaliland when the latter became independent. The
protectorate became independent on June, 26 1960; 5 days later,
on July 1, it joined Italian Somaliland to form the Somali
Republic.
</p>
<p> In June 1961, Somalia adopted its first national constitution
in a countrywide referendum, which provided for a democratic
state with a parliamentary form of government based on European
models. During the early post-independent period, political
parties reflected clan loyalties and brought a basic split
between the regional interests of the former British-controlled
north and the Italian-controlled south. There was also
substantial conflict between pro-Arab, pan-Somali militants
intent on national unification with the Somali-inhabited
territories in Ethiopia and Kenya and the "modernists", who
wished to give priority to economic and social development and
improving relations with other African countries. Gradually, the
Somali Youth League (SYL), formed under British auspices in
1943, assumed a dominant position and succeeded in cutting
across regional and clan loyalties. Under the leadership of
Mohamed Ibrahim Egal, prime minister from 1967 to 1969, Somalia
greatly improved its relations with Kenya and Ethiopia. The
process of party-based constitutional democracy came to an
abrupt end, however, on October 21, 1969, when the army and
police, led by Maj. Gen. Mohamed Siad, seized power in a
bloodless coup.
</p>
<p> Following the coup, executive and legislative power was
vested in the 20-member Supreme Revolutionary Council (SRC),
headed by Maj. Gen. Siad as president. The SRC pursued a course
of "scientific socialism" that reflected both ideological and
economic dependence on the Soviet Union. The government
instituted a national security service, centralized control over
information, and initiated a number of grassroots development
projects. Perhaps the most impressive success was a crash
program that introduced an orthography for the Somali language
and brought literacy to a large percentage of the population.
</p>
<p> The SRC became increasingly radical in foreign affairs, and
in 1974, Somalia and the Soviet Union concluded a treaty of
friendship and cooperation. As early as 1972, tensions began
increasing along the Somali-Ethiopian border. In the mid-1970s,
the Western Somali Liberation Front (WSLF) began guerrilla
operations in the Ogaden region of Ethiopia. Fighting increased,
and in July 1977, the Somali National Army (SNA) crossed into
the Ogaden to support the insurgents. The SNA moved quickly
toward Harer, Jijiga, and Dire Dawa, the principal cities of the
region. Subsequently, the Soviet Union, Somalia's most important
source of arms, embargoed weapons shipments to Somalia. The
Soviet's switched their full support to Ethiopia, with massive
infusions of Soviet arms and 10,000-15,000 Cuban troops. In
November 1977, President Siad expelled all Soviet advisers and
abrogated the friendship agreement with the U.S.S.R. In March
1978, Somali forces retreated into Somalia; however, the WSLF
continues to carry out sporadic but greatly reduced guerrilla
activity in Ogaden.
</p>
<p> Following the 1977 Ogaden war, President Siad looked to the
West for international support, military equipment, and economic
aid. The United States and other Western countries traditionally
were reluctant to provide arms because of the Somali
Government's support for insurgency in Ethiopia. In 1978, the
United States reopened the USAID (U.S. Agency for International
Development) mission in Somalia. Two years later, an agreement
was concluded that gave U.S. forces access to military
facilities in Somalia. In the summer of 1982, Ethiopian forces
invaded Somalia along the central border, and the United States
provided two emergency airlifts to help Somalia defend its
territorial integrity.
</p>
<p> Somalia hosts about 600,000 refugees, many of whom are ethnic
Somalis fleeting Ethiopian oppression in the Ogaden. About
500,000 refugees live in 35 camps, while the remainder live off
the land or in urban areas. The rapid influx of refugees has
strained the Somali economy, and extensive aid has been required
to avert health and nutritional catastrophes. Refugee assistance
is administered under the auspices of the Office of the UN High
Commissioner for Refugees, which oversees cooperative efforts
by several dozen private, governmental, and international
agencies. The World Food Program coordinates a large refugee
feeding program that recently has distributed 120,000 metric
tons of food per year.
</p>
<p>Political Conditions
</p>
<p> All political parties were abolished soon after the 1969
coup. In 1976, following several years of preparation, the
Somali Revolutionary Socialist Party (SRSP) was created by a
founding party congress. The new party replaced the Supreme
Revolutionary Council, and its leading members were absorbed
into the party's 69-member central committee. The SRSP is
responsible for publicizing the government's policies and for
assuring implementation. Opposition is not tolerated. In 1975,
10 Muslim leaders, known as mullahs, were executed for opposing a
law that guaranteed women's rights. In June 1982, the government
imprisoned several parliamentarians, who remain in jail for
alleged acts contrary to state security. The Somali Government
is striving to improve the economy, health care, and literacy.
Muslim influence is evident but not pervasive.
</p>
<p> In the December 1979 People's Assembly elections, citizens
voted on a slate of 150 candidates. Ninety-nine percent of those
voting favored the slate promulgated by the SRSP. During the
most recent election, held in 1984, an unopposed slate of SRSP
candidates received 99.9% of the vote.
</p>
<p>Source: U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Public Affairs,
April 1986.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>