Wednesday, April 22, 2020

A Glimpse of History: The Rise of Pastoralists against a Locust Control Program in Northern Somalia

Somalis' historical movements against foreign rule were significant in different epochs. It involved from one with cohesive religious agenda during Ahmed Gurrey to one that exploited our clan divisions (not to the same degree as the Tories and Loyalists in American history) to mostly popular revolt against a set of colonial policies. Here is an account of pastoralists who rose in revolt against the introduction of anti-locust campaign and attempts by the colonial authority to suppress and crash the revolt.


Source of map: "Islam in Ethiopia" by Tirmingham
The introductory part of this important historic account rehearses the core justification of the colonial mission as to educate the locals, which they characterized as separate species not much different from the “wild” and the “beast” on how to govern themselves or in euphemistic language how to orient the locals to adopt a "modern" system of governance. The colonial mission rested on the notion that colonialism was benign intervention to improve African societies by creating European style nation-states.

This historic record reflects various accounts of fierce resistances against occupiers that are barely studied in Somali history. The revolt against the imposition of taxation, the formation of small political parties that articulated the discontent and aspirations of Somalis for independence are few examples. However, the chief aspect of this heterogeneous forms of political struggle besides the Dervish struggle, according to the literature, was the Pastoralist’s revolt against a locust control program in which the colonial regime attempted to allocate a “set poisoned bait” to all the districts in "British Somaliland".

In May 1945, Locust swarms descended on the countryside and destroyed dozens of farms and grazing lands. However, the locals became suspicious throughout the protectorate that the British had secret designs to destock or wipeout their livestock. The first peace disorder took place In Zeila and Badhan, burning bait dumps and attacking employees. The residents of Burco took the riot to the streets and petitioned the District Commissioner at the time. The colonial authority warned the protestors to refrain from spreading mischievous rumors and that its locust control program was in the interest of soil conservation. It warned that anyone who is found of spreading of such ill-conceived rumors faces punishment. The colonial authority also preempted religious leaders from assuming any meaningful role that may trigger popular resistance. According to Jama Mohamed who synthesized these various accounts of resistance in the literature, Somalis held the belief that that the colonial authority had secret plan to introduce settlers, and this was a persistent theme in the literature[1].

Barely into a month following efforts to reverse locust invasion, residents in Hadaaftimo adopted a strategy of non-cooperation in the form of street protests hurling stones and poetic exchanges to foment public discontent. Although there were some benefits of the poison baits in containing the spread of locust, the natives believed their opposition to the locust control program was the right approach to take in saving their livestock. Prior to the campaign, the administration introduced two new policies to protect and conserve the ecology of the land by encouraging more livestock exports and grazing restrictions. The locals reacted negatively to the latter and invoked it as a rallying cry throughout the period of revolt.

Other instances of the resistance came in the form of literary expression through poems that called for the people to rise against the colonial policies and to revenge for the killing of Sheikh Bashir whose body was refused a proper burial. Instead, the British authorities left it unburied in a Polyneices’ style of punishment. Haji Adan Afqaloc, a native of Erigavo district, composed two historic national poems. “Raqdii Bashiir”, “The Corpse of Bashiir” and “Gobonimodoon” “In defense of political independence” while in Burco Jail. (Interestingly enough, Mahatma Gandhi and Kwami Nkurumah had spent sometime in the colonial jail in Bur’o, former British Somaliland.) Previously, the rise of Sheikh Bashir came after the colonial administration punished the Habarjeclo clan by confiscating one thousand of their camels and charging extortionate fee for the release of each camel. Sheikh Bashir’s armed struggle was short-lived after units of the police force attacked his fort and killed him and his entire followers. The poem translated in English goes:

Sheikh Bashir was hanged in daylight, at a house near you,
 His body torn out by bullets,
And still covered with wet blood,
They kicked and insulted him
Then watched him with contempt
When the unwashed body was thrown outside,
And refused burial, you were all a witness.
There were others killed playfully,
 About which nothing was done
 The body of Qayb-diid is still warm
 Though an old man, Farah was sent to jail
 And now like a beggar he roams the outside world
 They refused him rights over his family and wealth
 The unjust man (British) is punishing everybody.
 What the English always wanted, the people of India refused
 The houses of Punjab and the gold that they hoarded there
 have been denied to them
 Now they look back at them with nostalgia 
 The celebration is for Muhammad Ali (Egypt)
 And the French are leaving Syria that they conquered
 They withdrew from Beirut, and Lebanon.
 Many ships will arrive at our ports,
 They will bring here (Somaliland) those thrown out by the
 stream of shit,
 The place where you pasture Daawad (the land), the infidels
 will settle,
 A man who owns a car and an aeroplane will force you to
 work on his farms,
 Few would survive such humiliation.


This rich poem, the content of which features historic figures and awareness of political outcome in far regions, angered the Warsangeli and many other pastoralists. The final content of this history is how the Warsangeli pastoralists challenged the colonial authority, which in turn responded with brute force. For the first time, the administration sent armored vehicles and an aircraft from Royal Air force based in Aden led by Major General Wood to combat the Warsangeli pastoralists. At the time of these incidents, the administration claimed all locals were already disarmed and "pacified",  yet the pastoralists continued to resist against the policy, daring to attack armored vehicles, for instance, in one instance, 300 Warsangeli clansmen armed with spears, attacked armored units at Hubeera and Hadeed towns. “Even though the pastoralists suffered losses, their attitude remained ‘unsatisfactory, and more force was considered necessary’: their attitude was ‘unsatisfactory’ to Major Wood, because they continued to resist the antilocust campaign, and so more troops and police armoured cars were dispatched to the district,” per the literature. It is important to note that Somalis understood the concept of unity as it prevailed in our country back then.

This history reminds us that our people were united against foreign rule regardless of our narrow differences. Great poems like those of Haji Afqaloc did spark the revival of Somali nationalism long after Sayid Mohamed and Dervishes were defeated following the aerial bombardment of Taleh, Badhan, and Jidbale, former Dervish bases.

Mohamed Elmi

Note: The article was first posted in 2008.

[1] Mohamed, J. (2002). 'The Evils of Locust Bait': Popular Nationalism during the 1945 Anti-Locust Control Rebellion in Colonial Somaliland. Past and Present, (174), 184-216.

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