Somalia:Journalists on the run,By Amos Kareithi.
Nairobi 19 Augosto 2009
They have run out of ink, blood, breath and tears. Now they have
no more options. They are on the run. And there is no hiding
place.
Their government does not want them. The militiamen are having a
field day gunning and bombing them out of existence.
Behind the flapping curtain, a terrified man hides from the prying
eyes of his neighbours passing centimetres away.
Our knock elicits a terrified response punctuated by chest-
wracking coughs.


The squeaky voice is adamant. The warning, heartbreaking!
"Please do not come in. I do not want to speak to strangers. The
more you stand there the more you endanger my life," 40-year-old
Abdi Hakin Omar Jim'ale pleads.
In another time in another place, Hakin had a career, a wife and
family. All that is history now. He may never write again as his
right hand is rotting away.
His colleague, Mohamed Shidane Daban, once earned a living using
his right hand as a journalist. He too has one arm and is yet to
master how to use the left hand. Daban explains that Jumali is
about to have his right arm amputated to save his life.
Witnesses of terror
But this is not the most urgent need. "We are trying to raise
money to feed him. His house rent is in arrears and we do not know
where to get Sh7,000," Daban explains.
The rent, for the single room in a crowded compound is high. But
Jumali and his 27-year-old roommate, Hassan Ali Gessey formerly
SomaliWeyn Radio and TV News Editor, are like beggars.
They are thousands of kilometres away from home but have no dreams
of ever returning.
Instead of feeling homesick, they see silhouetted armed ghosts
determined to kill them in the strife torn Somalia.
Theirs is the plight of journalists who are like ‘cursed’
messengers and unwanted witnesses of the anarchy which has
engulfed their lawless country.
Despite escaping from the crudest to the most sophisticated
missiles, journalists from Somalia have no hiding place. About 20
of them have escaped Mogadishu, the most dangerous city in the
world for journalists, into Kenya.
CCI traced them in their hideouts in Eastleigh, Nairobi, and have
hair-raising accounts.
Most journalists in Somalia are quitting in their 20s and those
who persist pay the ultimate price, death. Most have been scared
to silence.
Daban’s account is the most gripping. He has been kidnapped once,
exiled twice and bombed four times.
On three occasions, he has slipped through the fingers of the
unforgiving and dreaded Al-Shabaab (the youth) militiamen.
Daban, a veteran Radio Bandir broadcaster invoked the wrath of
Transitional Federal Government agents who incarcerated him for
115 days.
"March 8, 2003 will forever be engraved in my mind. Four armed men
raided my house in Karan, Mogadishu, hours after I hosted a radio
show," Daban says.
In his show, callers condemned the rape of a 12-year-old orphaned
girl by four militiamen.
Hands ripped off
"As I fed biscuits to my 18-month-old daughter, four gunmen
stormed the compound," he recalls. Daban wipes a tear with his
left hand as he recounts how the gang sprayed him and his daughter
with bullets.
His wife Fatuma adds: "When the guns fell silent, I came out of
the house. I found the badly mutilated body of my daughter
sprawled on top of my husband. I fainted."
When Fatuma regained consciousness at Keysany Hospital, she
discovered that her daughter Sarah had died and her husband
crippled.
"The gunmen literally ripped off my right hand. I left it at the
scene. My kidney had to be removed as it was damaged," a tearful
Daban says. After recovering, Daban was supposed to relax and draw
a monthly salary but he found the microphone irresistible.
One year later, in 2004, he crossed the path of Hassan Dahir Aweys,
now the leader of Al-Shabaab, during a press conference at Peace
Hotel for asking ‘nonsensical questions.’
"He called me the following day and declared he would never
forgive me. He had not expected me to record the press
conference," he adds.
After this he slipped out of Somalia to South Africa where he
stayed until 2007 when he returned to his ‘dangerous job.’
Despite escaping death many times, Daban counts himself lucky.
His workmates such as Abdullahi Naste, Dahir Farah and Abdukadir
Kaskey were killed by militiamen and government forces.
Politicians and militiamen use press conferences to trap
journalists knowing all too well that a news hungry scribe can
never say no to a good story.
Asking many questions
Once smoked out of the open, the journalists are then gunned down.
On March 21, last year, Hamud Mohamed Hasan and Bashir Dirie Nalei
of Universal TV were arrested for ‘asking too many questions’
during a press conference by President Abdulahi Yusuf Ahmed.
Journalists’ death toll, according to Reporters San Frontiers,
(Reporters Without borders) is very high in Somalia.
Those killed so far are Ali Mohamed Omar (Radio Warsan) Mohamed
Abdulahi Khalif (Radio Voice of Peace), Abshir Ali Gabre and Ahmed
Hasan Mahama of Radio Jowhar.
Others are Mahmad Ahmed Ali (Capital Voice) Ali Iman Shamarke (HonAfrik)
and Bashir Nur Gedi (Radio Shabelle).
The chairperson of Somali Media Women Association, (Somwa) Marian
Zeila Abdirisuk, cringes in horror when her country is mentioned.
The 22-year-old journalist was never given a chance to consummate
her marriage.
"I married Mohamed Adawe, a journalist, on December 24 last year.
A week later I had to run for my life," Marian adds. Her wake up
call came when Al Shabab demanded to know why she was breaching
their code by working, yet she was a woman.
"They also said it was against their religion for women to mix
with men in work places," she adds.
Flogged in parliament
But the young professional who has dedicated her life to
championing the cause of women journalists, vows never to
surrender.
Somalia, she says is not a place for a female journalist given the
dictates of the religious fanatics who want to treat women as
objects.
She recalls how a female journalist was flogged in Parliament by
the speaker’s guards while MPs watched in glee.
"The same writer was attacked later at Mogadishu Airport while
waiting to cover the arrival of the then Prime Minister, Ali
Mohamed Gedi who was flying from Nairobi," Marian explains.
In Nairobi, the journalists CCI traced say they are living in fear
of being attacked by the very forces they fled from.
"I came to Kenya through Dadaab refugee camp. I saw many Al-Shabab
militiamen there. They later tried to kill me," Daban says.
Heavily armed militiamen invaded his house in block J at midnight
on January 9. Luckily, he had been tipped off but the militiamen
harassed and injured his wife Fatuma. "I do not feel safe. My
family is living in perpetual fear of another attack. I was lucky
to cheat a roadside car bomb but I do not want to overstretch my
luck," says Daban.
"I have seen their faces. They are here. It is like there is no
hiding place. Even when I was taken to Kakuma by UNHCR, danger was
still lurking," he adds.
Somalia’s Wayn Radio and TV News Editor, Hassan Ali Gessey says he
was forced to resign two months ago after receiving seven death
threats from government and militia forces.
A frightened Gessey explains: "On the day I resigned, 14 other
journalists too were forced to stop writing by militiamen. I can
not mention the group as it has a presence in Nairobi."
According to United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR)
Spokesman, Emmanuel Nyabera, the Kenya Somalia border is a
dangerous zone.
"The areas around the camps have always been insecure. A few
incidents have been experienced but the police usually intervene,"
Nyabera says.
"We have no evidence that Somali militia have sneaked into the
camps to pursue people. We work very closely with the Government
and refugee representatives to maintain the civilian nature of the
camps," he states.
Life of squalor
"Why are they killing us? Why are they targeting journalists? What
have we done? Even here in Kenya I know I will be attacked. I have
seen them here," says Daban.
CCI has learnt that there are 17 Somalia journalists in Kenya
still nursing wounds. An additional 20 have fled to Tanzania after
being hounded out of Kenya by their tormentors while Kampala is
hosting 15.
Those exiled in Kenya are living in squalor, packed in tiny
windowless rooms. Daban is sharing his 10 by 10 feet room with 16
people among them his mother-in-law and several sisters-in-law.
"When darkness fall, I stash my three children in a closet. The
adults sleep on the floor. It’s a miracle nobody has suffocated,"
he explains. During the day, he has to contend with a swarm of
flies from a mountain of garbage nearby. At the end of the month,
he has to part with Sh7,000.
The journalists contend that although Somalia has never known
peace for two decades, the country has never witnessed the current
barbarism and bloodletting.
Before all the witnesses of human suffering in Somalia are
whittled away by the trigger-happy militia men, the exiled
journalists hope that one day they will outrun their persecutors.
Source: The Standard