Read The World's Most Dangerous Place Online
Authors: James Fergusson
13
http://www.startribune.com/local/minneapolis/128663938.html
14
Jim Adams,
Star Tribune
, and Jason Ryan, ABC News, 31 October 2011
Chapter 14 ‘Clanism is a disease like AIDS’
1
Haight-Ashbury Free Medical Clinic,
Journal of Psychoactive Drugs
, vol. 41, 2009
2
Somali militants target addicts in UK’s ‘khat cafés’, CNN, 23 February 2012
3
See, for instance, Home Office Research Report no. 44, ‘Perceptions of the social harms associated with khat use’
4
Burton,
First Footsteps
, op. cit.
5
Robert Young Pelton, SomaliaReport, 8 May 2011
6
Ian Black,
Guardian
, 26 February 2010; Mohammed Jamjoom and Gena Somra, CNN, 2 December 2010
7
,
8
Mark Lancaster MP,
Hansard
, 11 January 2012
9
Prof Abdulahi A. Osman,
Cultural Diversity and the Somali Conflict: Myth or Reality?
, African Studies Institute, University of Georgia 2007
10
Hanley,
Warriors
, op. cit.
11
David St George,
Camden New Journal
, 13 May 2004
12
Robert Verkaik, ‘How MI5 blackmails British Muslims: “Work for us or we will say you are a terrorist”’,
Independent
, 21 May 2009
13
FCO, 15 November 2011
14
London
Evening Standard
, 15 November 2010; and see:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eFsIaUj1NPo
15
The
Sun
, 23 November 2010 and 14 April 2011
16
Quoted in the Puntland Development Research Centre’s booklet,
Somali Customary Law and Traditional Economy
, 2003
17
Jeffrey Gettleman,
New York Times
, 5 October 2011
Chapter 15 Operation Linda Nchi: The end for al-Shabaab?
1
See
data.unher.org
for updates of Dadaab’s fluctuating population
2
Daily Nation
, 21 June 2012/
Sabahi.com
(Kenya)
3
Daily Nation
, 30 May 2011 (Kenya)
4
Knight Frank Prime International Residential Index, March 2012
5
Rashid Abdi,
Daily Nation
(Kenya), 25 June 2012
6
,
7
Standard
(Kenya), 26 June 2012
8
UK High Commission, Nairobi;
Allafrica.com
9
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-18662975/
, 1 July 2012
10
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-19466828
, 3 September 2012
11
Daily Nation
(Kenya), 29 August 2012
Awde, Nicholas,
Somali-English Dictionary & Phrasebook
, Hippocrene Books 2009
Bahadur, Jay,
Deadly Waters – Inside the Hidden World of Somalia’s Pirates
, Profile Books 2011
Bowden, Mark,
Black Hawk Down
, Bantam Press 1999
Bridges, Peter,
Safirka: An American Envoy
, Kent State University Press 2000
Burton, Richard F.,
First Footsteps in East Africa
(1856), Konemann Classics 2000
Cawl, Faarax M.J.,
Ignorance is the Enemy of Love
, 1974, translated for Zed Books 1982
Chandler, Paul & Rachel,
Hostage
–
A Year at Gunpoint with Somali Gangsters
, Mainstream Publishing 2011
Cooper, Frederick,
Africa Since 1940 – The Past of the Present
, Cambridge University Press 2002
Dowden, Richard,
Africa – Altered States, Ordinary Miracles
, Portobello Books 2009
Drysdale, John,
Whatever Happened to Somalia?
Haan Publishing 1994
Farah, Nuruddin,
Crossbones
, Riverhead Books 2011
Farah, Nuruddin,
Links
, Duckworth 2005
Fazzina, Alixandra,
A Million Shillings – Escape from Somalia
, Trolley Books 2010
Freeman, Colin,
Kidnapped – Life as a Somali Pirate Hostage
, Monday Books 2011
Hanley, Gerald,
Warriors – Life and Death among the Somalis
, Hamish Hamilton 1971
Harper, Mary,
Getting Somalia Wrong? Faith, War and Hope in a Shattered State
, Zed Books 2012
Hartley, Aidan,
The Zanzibar Chest
, Harper Collins 2003
Hirsi Ali, Ayaan,
Infidel – My Life
, Pocket Books (Simon & Schuster) 2008
Hirsi Ali, Ayaan,
Nomad
–
A Personal Journey Through the Clash of Civilizations
, Simon & Schuster 2010
Jardine, Douglas, OBE,
The Mad Mullah of Somaliland
, Herbert Jenkins Ltd 1923
Laird, Elizabeth,
The Ogress and the Snake and Other Stories from Somalia
, Frances Lincoln Ltd 2009
Leonard, Elmore,
Djibouti
–
A Middle East Western on Water
, Weidenfeld & Nicolson 2011
Lewis I.M.,
A Pastoral Democracy
, Oxford University Press 1961
Lewis I.M.,
Understanding Somalia and Somaliland
, Hurst & Co 2009
McNeill, Capt Malcolm, DSO, & Lt A.C.H. Dixon,
In Pursuit of the ‘Mad’ Mullah: Service and Sport in the Somali Protectorate
, C. Arthur Pearson Ltd 1902, republished by Kessinger
Mohamed Abdi, Mohamed,
Anthropologie Somalienne
, Université de Besançon 1993
Mohamed Abdi, Mohamed,
Histoire des Croyances en Somalie
, Université de Besançon 1992
Mohamed Abdi, Mohamed,
Pour une Culture de la Paix en Somalie
, Association Européene des Etudes Somaliennes 1997
Murphy, Martin N., S
omalia: The New Barbary? Piracy and Islam in the Horn of Africa
, Hurst & Co 2011
Notten, Michael van,
The Law of the Somalis
, The Red Sea Press 2007
Osman, Abdurahman A. (Shuke),
Somali Customary Law and Traditional Economy – Cross-sectional, pastoral, frankincense and marine norms
, Puntland Development Research Centre 2003
Roble, Abdi & Doug Rutledge,
The Somali Diaspora – A Journey Away
, University of Minnesota Press 2008
Smith, Wilbur,
Those in Peril
, Macmillan 2011
Swayne, Harald G.C.,
Seventeen Trips through Somaliland and a Visit to Abyssinia: With Supplementary Preface on the ‘Mad Mullah’ Risings
, Rowland Ward Ltd 1903
Waugh, Evelyn,
Black Mischief
(1932), republished Penguin Modern Classics 2000
A great many people helped me with this book, but I am particularly indebted to the Airey Neave Trust, and its guardians Michael Bottenheim, Ed Butler, John Giffard and the late Paul Wilkinson, whose generous fellowship grant made an expensive research project financially viable. It was a privilege to have the confidence of so distinguished a body of people. My one regret is that the renowned Professor Wilkinson, who died suddenly in 2011 at the age of seventy-four, never saw the result of his kind support. Part of the Trust’s objective is to promote research ‘designed to make a discernible impact and to contribute in a practical way to the struggle against international terrorist activity’. I sincerely hope the trustees will feel that this book fulfils that brief.
Alongside a handful of people whose identities must remain undisclosed, I extend my especial thanks to Ahmed Abdullahi, Sahal Abdulle, Musa Duale Aden, Julian Alexander, Mohamed Ali (Wandsworth), Willy Athill, Richard Bailey, James Bays, Nick Beresford, John Bradshaw, Salih Brandt, Miles Bredin, Sophie Butler, Paul & Rachel Chandler, Charlie Courtauld, Osman Dagane, Julian Davies, Kabir Dhanji, Chris Donnelly, Sarah
Edworthy, Mohammed Ismail Elmi, Hassan Eymoy, Abdulhakim Mohamoud Haji Faqi, Mohamed Farah (Yare), Nuruddin Farah, Toby Fenwick-Wilson, Anders Folk, Per Gallestrup, Vivien Garrett, Patrick Gatara, Ngethe Gitungo, Nils Giversen, Kate Green, Cyprien Hakiza, Nick Hardwick, Stephen Harley, Simon Haselock, Mohamed H. Hassan (Gudbaaye), Mohamed-Rashid Sheikh Hassan, Carole Hillenbrand, Kate Holt, ‘Hotzi’, Fiona Houston, Buster Howes, David Stewart Howitt, Nick Hughes, Oliver Lee, Iman Nur Icar, Richard Jermy, Hugo Macpherson, Justin Marozzi, Herbert Mensah, Dick Meryhew, Will Milliken, Hassan Mohamed (Harlesden), Abdirizaq Mohedin, Rob Murphy, Mohamed Mustafa (Harlesden), Poly Muriithi, Jo Nickolls, William Noblett, Simona Opitz, Paddy O’Kennedy, Abdulrahman Abdurahman Osman (Shuke), David Orr, Andy Pring, David Ramsbotham, Dido Rasso, Alex Renton, Ruth Renton, Phil Rees, Hugh Riddell, Mari Roberts, Abdi Roble, Doug Rutledge, Hashi Shafi, Allie Shah, Mary Sharpe, William Snook, Jeremy Stampa-Orwin, Jon Stephenson, Jason Straziuso, Steve Turner, Henry Vines, Doug Young and Sabah Yusuf.
This list is not exhaustive: I have deliberately left out the names of several people who may find themselves mentioned in the main text. The most important name of all, however, is that of my wife Melissa. Without her love, patience, and encouragement – and exceptional proofreading skills – I could not have written this book.