By Mohamed Mukhtar
It is common to question the exactitude of many UN reports, but when some reports stretch the degree of truth too far or present dubious claims as watertight evidence they lead people to doubt the seriousness of the UN. At the beginning of November, the four member panel, which includes a Belgian, an American, a Kenyan and a Colombian that monitors the UN arms embargo against Somalia, produced an 86-page report linking Hezbollah with Islamic militias in Somalia. The report states that there were 720 Somali militias who fought along Hezbollah in its July battle with
The report rightly names the countries that have consistently violated the arms embargo against
Strangely, the UN Security Council met on 24th November and chose to adopt the report formally despite many experts expressing their reservation about the connection between Somalis and Hezbollah. Here are some of the scepticisms that experts, diplomats and media groups have expressed.
Professor MENKHAUS, a professor at Davidson College who monitors Somalia, said, “Pretty much everyone is spinning their wheels right now in Somalia mainly because Somalia just, as usual, presents the world with only a set of bad options. I would be surprised if Somalis were actually involved in the fighting.”
Ted Dagne, a
David Shinn, a former senior
Even those who are not Hezbollah fans did not take this allegation blindly. The Fox News reported, “Hezbollah, the experts said, is an extremely secretive organization that does not recruit foreigners to join its ranks. The group is also fervently Shi'ite, which theologically clashes with the fundamentalist Sunni Islam practiced in
The New York Times joined those who question the sources of this information, “Any involvement by Somalis would be surprising because Hezbollah’s effectiveness is widely attributed to its deep familiarity with the region.”
It will be helpful if the UN takes action against countries that have systematically and flagrantly violated the arms embargo against Somalia and stop chasing imagined Somali fighters dreamed up to be in Eastern Bekaa Valley or in Southern Lebanon.
Mohamed Mukhtar
Email: [email protected]
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