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Securitization and Ethnic Profiling of Somalis in Kenya

Tuesday April 15, 2014

 By A. Abdirahman (Banaadiri)

 

 

 

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There has been, and still is ongoing, an indiscriminate apprehension against Somalis, including Kenyan-Somalis, in Nairobi. Kenyan authorities have failed to put an end to systematic human rights violation against innocent Somalis, instead gives the green light to its security forces to continue making unlawful mass arrests until it eradicates what it has labelled as “terrorism.”  Somalis, as well as Kenyan Somalis- those who are ethnically Somali but Kenyan by birth- are experiencing securitization and ethnic profiling. Kenyan authorities are acting on perpetuating the myth that Somalis are a threat to Kenyan national security and must be removed from the country.

It seems that the Kenyan government has successfully sold this narrative to Kenyan citizens and intends to convince the international community of the same. The failure of the Kenyan government, international community, and to some extent the Somali government, to protect innocent Somali people, especially refugees, will only act as tinder to the seemingly dying flame; that is Al-Shabaab’s influence in the region.

Securitization Theory

For Waever, “by labelling something a security issue that it becomes one”. In daily political practices, it is by proclaiming an existence of a particular referent object is threatened and it has to be protected from an existential threat that it faces-‘by any means’.

In order to label something a security issue, there has to be a securitizing actor, who is able to take extraordinary measures to ensure the survival of the referent object. For something to be seen as an existential threat it only takes the securitizing authority to instil fear in its audience’s mind and make a proclamation: “if we do not tackle this problem everything else will be irrelevant” and our very existence is in jeopardy. Given their influential position the authority take matters into their own hands and employ extraordinary measures “swiftly and outside the normal democratic rules and regulations”.

Kenya’s recent mass arrests of Somalis demonstrate that it has acted ‘outside the normal democratic rules and regulations’. The government alleges that ethnic Somalis are an existential threat to the referent object, Kenyan national security. In the past few days, the security apparatus has employed any means within its power and outside the legal frame work that is in place in the Kenyan constitution, in the name of national security. Innocent people are harassed, arrested, and detained; their money and personal property taken in exchange for their freedom.

Securitization and Ethnic Profiling of Somalis

According to Kenyan Interior Minister Joseph Ole Lenku, the government has “arrested almost 4,000 people in this operation”. Among the detainees are Somali refugees, Somali-Kenyans, those with legal residency, as well as ethnic Somalis with foreign passports, mainly from Western countries. Pangani Police Station in Eastleigh, known colloquially as “Little Mogadishu”, as well as other police stations throughout Nairobi, has been filled with. Kasarani Sports Stadium, also in Nairobi, has become a detention centre for people who are being unlawfully detained, including women and children. Human Rights Watch has reported that during the operation “there have been numerous credible accounts of Kenyan security forces extorting money and beating people”.

In an attempt to legitimise the government’s human rights violations, Lenku cited recent grenade attacks, saying. "For the last few months we've had heightened insecurity. Time has come for a mop up to restore order". Instead of bringing the perpetrators of these violent acts to justice, the security forces continue to scapegoat innocent Somalis.

Recently, a Kenyan senator, Abdi Bule from Tana River was a victim of such ethnic profiling. The senator was stopped while driving through Eastleigh with his family members. When he produced both his national ID card as well as another showing that he was a senator, he was accused of carrying fake identification documents and was detained.

Speak out

The world needs to speak out. The international community cannot continue to comply with Kenya’s human rights violations. As a signatory of the 1951 Geneva Refugee Convention, Kenya must be held responsible for its actions. Mistreating Somalis will only benefit extremists; giving them a platform to recruit and radicalise young people, including from Western countries.

Kenya’s maltreatment of Somalis makes untenable its AMISOM membership, African troops in Somalia, Rather than fighting terrorism, they are creating conditions to create more terrorists.

By failing to speak out against Kenya’s ethnic profiling strategies, the Somali government is complicit. This tacit complicity further isolates the government from winning the hearts and minds of Somali people.

Finally, foreign donors and UN agencies have a responsibility to strongly and publicly oppose Kenya’s securitization and ethnic profiling of Somalis.

The author is a political and security analyst and he can be reached at [email protected]. Twitter: @Banaadiri



 





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