Mohamed Ali Nur | |
---|---|
Somali Ambassador to Kenya | |
In office October 2007 –April 2015 | |
Succeeded by | Gamal Osman |
Personal details | |
Born | Mogadishu,Somalia | 12 October 1962
Alma mater | University of Maryland and Montgomery College,United States |
Mohamed Ali Nur,popularly known as "Ambassador Americo",was the Somali Ambassador to Kenya from October 2007 to April 2015. [1] He was also a candidate in the 2017 Somali presidential election. [2]
In 2007,Nur played a key role in the reopening of the Somali Embassy in Nairobi,Kenya,which had been closed for 17 years due to the outbreak of the Somali Civil War. [3] He led the campaign that repossessed the prime embassy property in Nairobi that had been irregularly sold to private individuals in 1994 after the collapse of the Somalia government. [4]
Nur emerged as a symbol of reconciliation in a war-torn Somalia in September 2014 when he unconditionally forgave a man who confessed to being part of a gang that killed his 18-month-old daughter in 1992. [1] Since then,he has sought to use his story to promote reconciliation and peace in Somalia. [5] He also supports education,health,water and environmental conservation initiatives in Somalia through Yasmin Foundation,a non-profit organization he established with his family in 2010,in memory of his late daughter.
Nur was born on 12 October 1962 in Mogadishu,Somalia,where he spent his childhood. He is the eldest in a family of six siblings. His father,Ali Nur "Americo",worked as a foreman in a borehole-drilling company. Later,he ran a chain of restaurants and a rental car service in Mogadishu. He also had an interest in real estate. His mother was a housewife who died when he was 9 years old. [3]
The nickname "Americo" was passed to Nur from his father whose fondness for American cowboy hats earned him that sobriquet from his friends, [3] following the Somali tradition for nicknames. [6]
Nur received his primary and high school education in Mogadishu. He then proceeded to Montgomery College,Maryland,United States where he studied economics before enrolling at the University of Maryland to further this study. [3]
Upon graduation in 1985,Nur returned to Somalia and in 1986 he began working at the Central Bank of Somalia (CBS) as the head of the accounting department. He also helped to manage his father's chain of businesses in Mogadishu. Nur married and had his first child when he was 26. He served at the Central Bank until the outbreak of the Somali Civil War in 1991 and the collapse of the central government. [3]
In 1992,heavily armed men attacked his home in Mogadishu in search of valuables. In the process,his 18-month-old daughter lost her life when a grenade was thrown into the courtyard where she was playing. [1] The deteriorating security situation in Somalia led Nur and his family to relocate to the U.S. where he lived and worked before relocating to Canada in 2000. [3]
In 2004,Nur flew to Nairobi at the request of the newly appointed prime minister of the Transitional Federal Government (TFG) of Somalia,Ali Mohamed Ghedi,whose government was initially based in the Kenyan capital. Nur was appointed the director-general of the prime minister's office. [3]
In 2006,the TFG relocated to Somalia,first to the south-western town of Baidoa and later to Jowhar,a city in central Somalia,but Nur remained in Nairobi. Along with a team he began efforts to reopen Somalia's embassy that had ceased operations nearly 17 years earlier at the collapse of the government. The embassy was officially reopened in 2006, [3] which was widely welcomed by the Somali nationals in Kenya and around the globe.
Nur initially served as Charge-de-Affaires of the embassy. In October 2007,he was appointed the substantive ambassador. He officially started work after presenting his diplomatic credentials to Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki at State House,Nairobi,on 19 October 2007. [3] The position of Somalia envoy to Kenya and Kenya–Somalia relations are considered important within Somali political and diplomatic circles,as Kenya is considered a strategic country hosting thousands of Somali refugees and investments by Somali nationals.
Nur led efforts to repossess embassy property in Nairobi that had been irregularly sold to private individuals after the collapse of the Somali government. In December 2010,after a three-year court battle, [3] Kenya's High Court ruled in favour of the Somali government. [4]
In 2013,a tripartite agreement was negotiated and signed by Kenya,Somalia,and the United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR),facilitating the voluntary and dignified repatriations of Somali refugees in Kenya. As a result of the agreement,thousands of refugees returned to Somalia while others await repatriation. [7] Nur cited as his other accomplishments increased trade and passenger flights between Somalia and Kenya. [5]
During his term,the Somali embassy in Nairobi became the coordination office for United Nations and international NGOs providing humanitarian assistance and support projects inside Somalia. It also provided consular support services for Somali nationals. In 2013,the embassy became the first of Somalia's diplomatic missions to issue a new Somali passport. The embassy also helped Somali refugees obtain documents from the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and authenticated education certificates for Somali nationals seeking to study in Kenya. [3]
Kenyan troops crossed into Somalia in October 2011,pursuing Somalia-based militant group Al Shabaab. [3] Al Shabaab continued attacks in Kenya at Westgate Mall (September 2013),Mpeketoni (June 2014) and Garissa University College (April 2015). Nur condemned Al Shabaab attacks inside Kenya and called for more cooperation between Kenya and Somalia in tackling the group,while also speaking out against reactionary profiling,harassment and arrests of Somali nationals and ethnic Somalis by Kenyan authorities. [3]
Whenever there are attacks, I see the media point fingers at Somalis. These Al Shabaab are not Somalis, they are criminals. Somali refugees are in Kenya because of these criminals. It is not, therefore, right to profile Somalis. Kenya and Somalia have a common enemy and must be united to fight them.
— Mohamed Ali Nur [5]
After the Westgate Mall attack, Nur mobilized and led Somali nationals in Kenya to donate blood and offer financial and moral support to the victims as a show of solidarity and to ease buildup of communal tensions. [8]
Nur served as Somalia's envoy to Kenya until April 2015 before his successor, Gamal Osman, was appointed by Somali President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud.
In September 2014, Nur emerged as a symbol of reconciliation in Somalia [1] after he unconditionally forgave a man who confessed to being part of the gang that killed his 18-month-old daughter in 1992 while robbing his home. [3]
The man walked to him as he sat with friends at a restaurant in Mogadishu and made the dramatic confession before asking for forgiveness. Nur said that despite the shock, anger, and desire for revenge he felt in his heart, he forgave the man since he showed remorse and had the courage to confess his crime. When the two hugged in reconciliation, they both shed tears. [3] The envoy said that after forgiving his daughter's killer, he felt "a huge weight had been lifted off his chest". [1]
The incident attracted considerable attention among Somali nationals. [1] [3] Soon after the incident, similar stories of killers confessing their past crimes and being forgiven by families of their victims emerged in several parts of Somalia [8] while the subject of national reconciliation and unity dominated public debate. [3]
Nur has taken the cause of promoting peace and reconciliation in Somalia. [5] During 2015 and 2016, Nur traveled to different parts of Somalia on a journey he said was to promote peace and reconciliation through a grassroots approach. He dubbed it as the "Peace Journey" (Somali : Socdaalka Nabadda). [8]
Nur was one of the twenty-one candidates who ran for President of Somalia's Federal Government in the 8 February 2017 election held in Mogadishu. He did not receive enough votes to proceed beyond the first round of voting.
He campaigned on the pledge of rebuilding the Somali National Army (SNA) to secure law and order and reduce reliance on external forces serving under the umbrella of the African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM). He also pledged to tackle youth unemployment by creating jobs and educational opportunities, to prevent their recruitment into Al Shabaab or from undertaking dangerous journeys to reach Europe or western countries. He also promised to catalyze grassroots reconciliation by guiding the conversation among different groups of the population. [8]
In 2010, Ambassador Mohammed Ali Nur and his family founded Yasmin Foundation, a humanitarian non-profit organization to support education, water, health and environmental conservation initiatives in Somalia. The foundation is named in memory of his late daughter Yasmin, who lost her life to a violent robbery in Mogadishu in 1992. The foundation has been involved in the following projects:
Education
Health
Water
Environmental Conservation
The Somali Civil War is an ongoing civil war that is taking place in Somalia. It grew out of resistance to the military junta which was led by Siad Barre during the 1980s. From 1988 to 1990, the Somali Armed Forces began engaging in combat against various armed rebel groups, including the Somali Salvation Democratic Front in the northeast, the Somali National Movement in the northwest, and the United Somali Congress in the south. The clan-based armed opposition groups overthrew the Barre government in 1991.
Sharif Sheikh Ahmed is a Somali politician who served as President of Somalia from 2009 to 2012. He is the founder and leader of Himilo Qaran political party and also the founder and head of the Forum for National Parties of Somalia. He is the chairperson of the Council of Presidential Candidates of Somalia.
Augustine Philip Mahiga was a Tanzanian diplomat and Minister of Justice and Constitutional Affairs in 2019 and 2020. He served as Minister of Foreign Affairs from 2015 to 2019. He previously served as the Permanent Representative of Tanzania to the United Nations from 2003 to 2010 and as the UN Special Representative and Head of the United Nations Political Office for Somalia from 2010 to 2013.
The African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM) was a regional peacekeeping mission operated by the African Union with the approval of the United Nations Security Council. It was mandated to support transitional governmental structures, implement a national security plan, train the Somali security forces, and to assist in creating a secure environment for the delivery of humanitarian aid. As part of its duties, AMISOM supported the Federal Government of Somalia's forces in their battle against Al-Shabaab militants.
The transitional federal government (TFG) was the government of Somalia between 2004 and 2012. Established 2004 in Djibouti through various international conferences, it was an attempt to restore national institutions to the country after the 1991 collapse of the Siad Barre government and the ensuing Somali Civil War.
After two decades of violence and civil war and after the Transitional Federal Government (TFG) of Somalia captured Mogadishu and Kismayo, the TFG attempted to disarm the militias of the country in late 2006. According to the UN/World Bank's Joint Needs Assessment (JNA) coordination secretariat, "the total estimated number of militias [militia members] to be demobilized is 53,000." In 2005, they estimated that "there are 11–15,000 militia people controlling Mogadishu ."
The Duduble, also known as the Maxamuud Hiraab, is a Somali sub clan of the larger Hawiye. The Duduble like most Somali clans can trace their lineage back to Samaale the oldest common father of major Somali clans.
The Somali Civil War (2009–present) is the ongoing phase of the Somali Civil War which is concentrated in southern and central Somalia. It began in late January 2009 with the conflict mainly between the forces of the Federal Government of Somalia assisted by African Union peacekeeping troops and al-Qaeda aligned al-Shabaab militants.
The Battle of Mogadishu (2010–11) began on 23 August 2010 when al-Shabaab insurgents began attacking government and African Union Mission to Somalia (AMISOM) positions in the Somali capital of Mogadishu. Al-Shabaab began its offensive after its spokesman said the group was declaring a "massive war" on troops sent by AMISOM, describing its 6,000 peacekeepers as "invaders". In December 2010 the number of AMISOM troops was increased to 8,000 and later to 9,000. The battle's name usually includes the years, when referenced, in order to distinguish it amongst the nine major Battles of Mogadishu during the decades long Somali Civil War.
Operation Linda Nchi had the Kenya Defence Forces enter southern Somalia beginning in 2011. The Kenyan government declared the operation completed in March 2012, but its forces then joined AMISOM in Somalia.
This is a 2012 timeline of events in the Somali Civil War (2009–present).
This is a 2014 timeline of events in the Somali Civil War (2009–present).
Operation Indian Ocean was a joint military operation between the Somali military, AMISOM and the United States military against the Al-Shabaab militant group aimed at eliminating the remaining insurgent-held areas in southern Somalia. It officially began in August 2014.
This is a 2015 timeline of events in the Somali Civil War (2009–present).
On 27 March 2015, Al-Shabaab militants launched an attack on the Makka al-Mukarama hotel in Mogadishu, Somalia. The siege ended a few hours later on 28 March, after a special forces unit of the Somali Armed Forces stormed the premises, recaptured it, and killed all five of the attackers. According to the Ministry of Information, around 20 people died during the standoff, including the perpetrators, security forces, hotel security guards and some civilians, with around 28 wounded. The special forces also rescued more than 50 hotel guests. President of Somalia Hassan Sheikh Mohamud ordered an investigation into the attack, and the Ministry of Information announced that the federal government was slated to pass new laws to curb illicit firearms. On 8 May, the Makka al-Mukarama hotel officially reopened after having undergone renovations.
This article contains a timeline of events for the Somali jihadist group al-Shabaab.
On 1 April 2018, Al-Shabaab fighters attacked an AMISOM base in Bulo Marer in the Lower Shebelle region of Somalia.
Events in the year 2021 in Somalia.
Events in the year 2022 in Somalia.