A
confidential report by U.N. monitors accuses Kenyan soldiers in the
African Union peacekeeping force in Somalia of facilitating illegal
charcoal exports from the port city of Kismayu,
a business that generates millions of dollars a year for Islamic militants seeking to topple the government.
The
case of the failed ban on Somali charcoal outlined in the report
highlights the difficulty of cutting off al Shabaab militants' funding
and ensuring compliance with U.N. sanctions when there is little
appetite for enforcing them on the ground.
The
Kenyan military denied the allegations in the U.N. Monitoring Group's
latest annual report to the Security Council's sanctions committee on
Somalia and Eritrea.
The report was completed before recent clashes in Kismayu.
In
that fighting, rival militias battled for control of the strategic port
city after Ahmed Madobe, leader of the Ras Kamboni militia and a former
Islamist warlord, became leader of the Jubaland region, which includes
Kismayu, in May.
The situation remains tense though the Mogadishu
government, which initially opposed Madobe, is letting him stay on as
interim leader.
Kismayu is a lucrative prize for clan leaders,
bringing with it generous revenues from charcoal exports, port taxes and
levies on arms and other illegal imports.
The Security Council
banned the export of charcoal from Somalia in February 2012 to cut off
one of the main sources of income for al Shabaab, which has been
fighting for control of Somalia for years and enforces a strict version
of sharia law in the areas it occupies.
Kenyan forces in the
African Union's AMISOM peacekeeping mission, which has a U.N. Security
Council mandate and receives funding from the European Union and United
States, helped the Somali government retake control of Kismayu when the
al Qaeda-aligned militants fled in September 2012.
Afterwards, the AU almost immediately urged the Security Council to lift the charcoal export ban, at least temporarily.
Kenya
supported the idea, arguing that Kismayu's angry charcoal traders could
undermine the security of its troops. The Monitoring Group, which
reports on compliance with the Somalia/Eritrea sanctions regime,
disputed Nairobi's analysis.
"The argument that a group of
charcoal traders constituted a greater threat to the KDF (Kenya Defence
Force) than al Shabaab that had just been routed in Kismayu, was
difficult to appreciate," the group said in an annex to its annual
report, which was seen by Reuters.
"Instead, it was far more
likely that exporting charcoal would exacerbate clan tensions and
resource interests, leading to much broader conditions of conflict," the
group said in its report, which is nearly 500 pages with all its
annexes. "And this is precisely what subsequently occurred."
U.N. CHARCOAL EXPORT BAN FLOUTED
The
Monitoring Group's report is likely to elicit new criticism of Nairobi
from Somalia's government, which has accused Kenyan troops of taking
sides against it in the recent clashes in Kismayu and suggested they
should be replaced by a more neutral force. Kenya denied the charge.
The
group said Somali President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud asked AMISOM in
October 2012 to keep Kismayu port closed to commercial traffic,
including charcoal. But it said he was unaware that former Prime
Minister Abdiweli Mohamed Ali Gaas had already asked the Security
Council's sanctions committee to review the ban.
The group said an AMISOM commander lied to the president.
"As
late as 26 October 2012, the AMISOM Deputy Force Commander for
Operations and Plans, Major General Simon Karanja (of Kenya), assured
the President that the port was closed and there was no shipping
traffic, while he knew otherwise," the Monitoring Group said.
The
Kenyans did not hide the fact that they wanted to ease the charcoal ban
because they feared it could make their job of keeping the peace in
Kismayu that much more difficult.
When it became clear that the
Security Council would not lift the charcoal export ban, the "the KDF
(Kenyan forces), Madobe and his Ras Kamboni forces took the unilateral
decision to begin the export of charcoal from Kismayu port," the report
said.
Once that decision was made, the charcoal export business in Kismayu, which the Monitoring Group said is known to have the highest-quality charcoal in Somalia, resumed in earnest.
Colonel
Cyrus Oguna, a spokesman for the KDF, which has been battling al
Shabaab in Somalia since October 2011, said Kenya was not aiding the
charcoal exports in any way.
"The KDF is not at the sea port. The
port is being managed and supervised by a committee put in place by the
administrators of Jubaland," Oguna said in Nairobi.
AMISOM did not respond to a request for comment.
Although
the Kenyan AMISOM contingent and Madobe's Ras Kamboni militia took over
Kismayu after al Shabaab left, the U.N. monitors said al Shabaab
retained a share of the charcoal business after it lost control of the
city.
"The nature of the business enterprise forged by al Shabaab
continues with al Shabaab, its commercial partners and networks still
central to the trade," the Monitoring Group said.
"Essentially,
with the changeover of power in Kismayu, the shareholding of the
charcoal trade at the port was divided into three between al Shabaab,
Ras Kamboni and Somali Kenyan businessmen cooperating with the KDF
(Kenyan army)."
Not only did the charcoal export business continue
in spite of the U.N. Security Council ban, but it saw a dramatic
increase, the U.N. monitors' report said.
"In fact, its
shareholding in Kismayu charcoal, in combination with its (al Shabaab's)
export revenues at Barawe (town) and its taxation of trucks
transporting charcoal from production areas under its control are likely
exceeding the revenue it generated when it controlled Kismayu," it
said.
In the 1990s the Horn of Africa country imploded amid clan
warfare after the overthrow of a dictator and became virtually lawless
for two decades. AMISOM was created in 2007 to support efforts to
restore order in Somalia, and today the mission's troops are mostly from
Uganda, Burundi, Djibouti and Kenya.
'KING OF CHARCOAL'
The
Monitoring Group estimated that al Shabaab, which has been driven out
of many parts of Somalia but remains a potent force, exported some 9
million to 11 million sacks of charcoal from the country in 2011, raking
in more than $25 million.
"At the rate of export since November
2012, the Monitoring Group estimates that this number is rising to 24
million sacks per year and represents an overall international market
value of $360-384 million USD, with profits divided along the charcoal
trade supply chain, including for al Shabaab," the report said.
The
group said it estimated charcoal exports from Kismayu alone were worth
$15 million to $16 million per month. It noted that traders in Dubai say
the actual export amount is probably much higher.
The group said
there was also charcoal exporting from Barawe, the al Shabaab-controlled
town north of Kismayu, bringing the militants $1.2 million to $2
million per month in taxes.
One Kismayu charcoal trader with
strong links to al Shabaab is Hassan Mohamud Yusuf, alias Awlibaax, from
the Mareehan clan and chairman of the Juba Business Committee, the
group said. He is also linked to Dubai's key charcoal businessman, Saleh
Da'ud Abdulla, who himself has connections to al Shabaab, it added.
Another
is Ali Ahmed Naaji, from the minority Cawro-maleh clan, who "arranges
or provides loans to al Shabaab, and makes investments for them in South
Sudan," the report said.
It said Yusuf and Naaji alone account for around 32 percent of charcoal exports from Kismayu, most of which go to Dubai.
The
largest purchaser of charcoal in Dubai is Al Qaed International General
Trading, owned by Baba Mansoor Ghayedi, alias Haji Baba, an Iranian living in Dubai who described himself to the Monitoring Group as the "King of Charcoal."
The
report said Haji Baba denied importing Somali charcoal in violation of
the Security Council ban and that the paperwork shows his charcoal comes
from Kenya and Djibouti, both of which have banned charcoal exports.
The
Monitoring Group included in one annex what it said were examples of
false bills of lading certifying Somali charcoal as coming from Kenya.
The
United Arab Emirates has been aware of the illegal Somali charcoal
shipments, the monitors said. In September 2012 it notified the
Monitoring Group that it had impounded a shipment of 100,000 sacks of
Somali charcoal.
The monitors said charcoal traders in Dubai
informed them that the impounded shipment eventually reached the market.
Some 10,000 bags of charcoal were unloaded in Dubai and the rest in Saudi Arabia. The consignee of that shipment was Haji Baba.
By Louis Charbonneau
(Additional reporting by Abdi Sheikh in Mogadishu and James Macharia in Nairobi; Editing by Xavier Briand)
SOURCE: TRENDING.CO.KE