Somali faction leader Aidid dies
August 2, 1996
Web posted at: 8:30 a.m. EDT
MOGADISHU, Somalia (CNN) -- The Somali faction leader whose
forces drove a U.N. peacekeeping mission out of the
lawless east African country has died.
Gen. Mohamed Farrah Aidid's death was confirmed Friday by
the ambassador-at-large for Somalia, Ahmed Mohamed Darman, in
Washington, D.C., but the cause of the general's death was
unclear.
Radio South Mogadishu, Aidid's radio station, reported that
he died Thursday of a heart attack "while performing his
national duties."
Aidid, who proclaimed himself president of Somalia following
the ouster of the U.N. peacekeepers in 1995, was reported
wounded last week in fighting between his militia and other
factions. At the time he was said to have been treated and
released, but some sources said his wounds were more serious.
A U.N. source said Friday that Aidid was hit by two bullets
on July 24 in the Medina neighborhood of south Mogadishu, and
that one of the wounds became infected. The source speculated
that the general could have suffered a heart attack during a
subsequent surgery.
Thousands of Somalis flooded Mogadishu's streets as the news
of Aidid's death spread, many trying to reach his home or
the
mosque where a funeral service was to be held later Friday.
There were no reports of fighting in the already bloodied
streets of the Somali capital, where the forces of Aidid and
arch-rivals Ali Mahdi Mohamed, and later those of Osman
Hassan Ali Atto, have engaged in a civil war since 1991.
Aidid was a high-ranking official in the government of
Somali President Mohamed Siad Barre, serving in the army, as a
member of the cabinet and as ambassador to India before Siad Barre named him intelligence chief. But Siad Barre later suspected Aidid of plotting
against him, and jailed him for six years.
In January 1991, Aidid's Hawiye clan overthrew Siad Barre,
but the clan broke into factions, led by Aidid and Ali
Mahdi, and began fighting for control in Mogadishu. Atto ousted
Aidid last year as head of the Somali National Alliance,
adding another major faction into the bloody civil war that
has cost the lives of more than 350,000 Somalis from famine
and fighting.
The United Nations, prompted by increased warnings from
humanitarian groups, sent a multi-nation peacekeeping force,
including a contingent of U.S. Marines, into the country in
late 1992 to protect relief workers and help supplies reach
the Somali people. In less than a year, the United Nations
had issued a
warrant for Aidid's arrest, charging him in an ambush in
which 24 Pakistani peacekeepers were killed.
Aidid denied
responsibility for the deaths, and the U.N. forces never came
close to capturing him.
In October, 1993, the general's militia brought down two U.S.
helicopters, killing 18 Army rangers. An outcry in the United
States over the
killings forced President Clinton to speed up withdrawal of
troops from the failed mission. The United Nations completed
its
withdrawal in March 1995, leaving Somalia completely to the
warring factions.
One aid official, calling Aidid a major obstacle to many
peace plans, said that the general's death could improve
prospects for peace in Somalia.
"For organizations such as the United Nations and European
Union, his death certainly means the death of the major
bogeyman."
-- U.N. Official
"Normally one should feel sad when someone dies, but it's
difficult," the official said. "He has been responsible for
so many other people dying."
Another aid official predicted a short power struggle, but
also said Aidid's death would benefit Somalia and its people
in the long run.
"For organizations such as the United Nations and European
Union, his death certainly means the death of the major
bogeyman," the official said.
Radio South Mogadishu said that a committee had been
appointed
to head Aidid's political faction and select a new leader.
The radio station read a statement, apparently from the
committee, calling on the general's militia to "remain
watchful and defend their rights."
Aidid, believed to be in his early 60s, is survived by his
third wife, Khadija Said Gurhan, and 14 children.
The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.
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