Canadian Insurgent 'Asparo' Killed In Somalia
July 3, 2008
A former Toronto resident who joined an Islamic insurgency in Mogadishu has been
killed this week during violent clashes in wartorn Somalia.
Ethiopian troops killed Canadian Abdullahi Afrah, 56, late Tuesday during
fighting in central Somalia, according to local media reports and various
members of Toronto's Somali community.
Known widely as Asparo, he had left Toronto a decade ago to return to his
birthplace in support of an Islamic group that fought to bring leadership to a
country without a stable government since 1991.
He became a high-ranking member of the Union of Islamic Courts that held power
in Mogadishu for six months in 2006. The group's strict adherence to sharia law
– such as the public executions of criminals and flogging of women who failed to
don the hijab – drew comparisons to the Taliban.
"It's unfortunate to see a former friend and colleague fall into the trap of the
radicals, particularly for someone who lived in Canada and enjoyed the freedom
and law and order," said Ahmed Yusuf, a Toronto social worker who used to play
basketball with Afrah when he lived in the city in the 1990s.
Others say the killing will undermine efforts to bring peace as Afrah was among
the moderate voices within the Islamic movement.
"It is not clear why Ethiopian troops went there at this particular time. ...
This will reinforce the position of the hardliners who were arguing against any
peace deal while the Ethiopians are inside Somalia," said journalist Sahal
Abdulle, who returned to Toronto last year after surviving a bombing that killed
Canadian journalist Ali Sharmarke.
"(Afrah) was one of the few intellectuals within his organization that had
weight to move this peace process forward."
Afrah had initially immigrated to Canada when Somalia's government collapsed in
1991 and Toronto became home to thousands of Somali immigrants and refugees. He
is best remembered here for running a halal grocery store on Dundas St. W. His
friends say that, while he lived in Canada, he wasn't overly political or
religious.
When the Union of Islamic Courts was in power in 2006, there was tentative
support for Afrah's group since their authoritarian rule had brought stability.
Somalis celebrated the Islamists' defeat of the rival warlords, whose fighting
had left the country in shambles.
"There's a bright future if things go on like this. We can say people will be
saved, resources may come back, international relations may improve,
construction may happen, people's trust in each other may be renewed," Afrah
said in an interview with the Toronto Star from Mogadishu in October 2006.
Two months later, Ethiopian troops moved into Mogadishu in support of the
country's fledgling transitional federal government and crushed the Islamic
group, sending its leaders fleeing.
Afrah had remained in hiding in Mogadishu with his family.
During a 2007 cellphone interview, Afrah had warned that Somalia would descend
into chaos if the U.S.-backed Ethiopian troops wouldn't leave the country and
vowed to have them removed by force if they refused.
Somalia has seen some of its worst fighting in the past 18 months, with almost
daily suicide and bombing attacks that have made the country more unstable than
Iraq or Afghanistan, according to some international observers.
But a key step toward peace was taken last month during a conference in
Djibouti, where Somalia's transitional federal government signed a ceasefire
agreement with the opposition group of moderate Islamists, the Alliance for
Reliberation of Somalia.
But the June 9 agreement split the insurgents; radical leaders vowed to continue
fighting and called Somalia's interim government a puppet regime for Ethiopia
and the U.S.
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Source: Toronto Star