Bakaara Market
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The Bakaara Market (Somali: Suuqa Bakaaraha) is a Mogadishu open market and the largest in Somalia. The name Bakaaraha derives from the Somali word for grain silo or storage, baqaar. (Bakaaraha is a definite article.)
The market was created in late 1972 during the reign of Siad Barre regime. Proprietors sold and still sell daily essentials (including staples such as maize, sorghum, beans, peanuts, sesame, wheat and rice), petrol and medicine, but it also largely expanded during and after the civil war and had has become notoriously known as a market of small arms and other weapons, including rocket propelled grenades (RPGs), mortars (80mm and 120mm), 23mm and 30mm antiaircraft guns, and ammunition of all types.
It is also famous for other illicit activities, such as forged Somali passports processed within minutes, including Ethiopian and Kenyan passports, and other forged documents, including but not limited to birth certificates and university diplomas. This illicit sub-market is famously known as Cabdalle Shideeye, named after one of its first proprietors.
The Bakaara Market is a focus of ongoing arms control efforts for the disarmament in Somalia, and has caught fire a few times in recent years.[1][2][3]
Gunfire is commonly heard, as shoppers fire weapons into the air to test them before purchase, hence giving the sub-gun market the nickname cirtoogte (sky shooter). Anti-aircraft guns and mortars are tested at a further distance from the market. In 2001, a rough estimate by aid agencies placed the number of assault rifles in Mogadishu at somewhere near 1 million, for a city population of 1.5 million.[4]
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[edit] Black Hawk Down
In October 1993, the market was the site where one of the two Black Hawk helicopters were downed in the Battle of Mogadishu, which led to a fierce firefight in the area for the following hours as stated in the nonfiction book, Black Hawk Down: A Story of Modern War.[5]
[edit] Violence, Fires, Counterfeit Currency
In 1997, a dispute arose over the control of the collection of taxes in the market. As a result of the confrontation, an RPG was fired into a fuel tank (which are above ground in the market, not stored underground). Several civilians were injured.[6]
In March 1999 hundreds fled the market after fighting erupted. Fighting continued between Islamic courts and secular militias through April.[7]
On January 26, 2000, the market was the site of the shooting of Ahmed Kafi Awale, a radio commentator for Hussein Mohamed Aidid's Radio of the Somali People. Awale was there covering the market. Three others were killed and seven badly injured.[8]
On January 5, 2001, a fire broke out in the market, caused by two fighting militias. The vegetable section of the market was destroyed, as was part of the milk section. Islamic Courts Union (ICU) militia forces broke up the fighting.[9]
In February 2001, an influx of counterfeit currency led to the shutting of the market for a time. The Somali shilling collapsed. Traders only accepted U.S. dollars for a time. Not only the cost of arms were affected -- the cost of food and essentials doubled during the crisis.[10][11]
On April 10, 2004, another fire broke out in the market. According to a report to the UN Security Council:
On the night of 10 April [2004], a serious fire in the main Bakaara market in Mogadishu resulted in at least eight people killed and more than 30 wounded. Armed looters shot indiscriminately into the crowd. The incident caused widespread insecurity in the areas surrounding the market.[1]
Once again, on October 02, 2007, a raging fire started in the market, spreading rapidly. The fire reportedly was caused by a fired shell during a brief fight between the resistance forces against Ethiopian occupiers and their allied transitional government forces nearby.[12]
[edit] Security Checkpoints
The security checkpoint for the market was controlled for a long while by Mohamed Qanyare Afrah, a Mogadishu warlord who was appointed Minister of National Security by the Transitional Federal Government. The checkpoints for the market were to be taken down in June 2005 as part of the Green Leaf for Democracy (GLED) initiative of a "Global Week against Small Arms."[13]
[edit] Recent Activities
The arms trading in the Bakaara Market was closed by the Islamic Courts Union (ICU) after they took control of the capital following the Second Battle of Mogadishu.
A fire broke out December 6, 2006, beginning at a charcoal storage facility and then spreading to nearby shops.[14]
On December 11, the Islamists announced they planned to impose a tax on the market to raise funds for their movement.[15] Before they could effect their plans, the ICU left the capital. On December 28, 2006, the market closed during the uncertainty of the Fall of Mogadishu[16]
Arms trading recently re-opened with the ouster of the ICU by the Transitional Federal Government. However, Somali Prime Minister Ali Mohamed Gedi has ordered a disarmament of the populace, calling the future of the Bakaara Market into question.[17]
[edit] References
- ^ a b Local Business, Local Peace: the Peacebuilding Potential of the Domestic Private Sector: Case Study, Somalia International Alert
- ^ The Bakara Market posted by hankcheng
- ^ After Years of Chaos, Somalia Is Open for Business Banadir.com
- ^ Feature: Somalia Moaning in Gunfire Xinhua
- ^ Reliving a firefight: Hail Mary, then hold on Mark Bowden
- ^ Horn of Africa Monthly Review 1-31 May 1997 UNDP
- ^ World: Africa Mogadishu market clash BBC
- ^ Bakara market fire in 2007
- ^ Horn of Africa: IRIN Update, 10 January SOMALIA: Fire in Bakaara market, IRIN
- ^ Horn of Africa: IRIN Update, 12 February IRIN
- ^ Fake Somali Banknotes Flood into Mogadishu Xinhua
- ^ [1][dead link]
- ^ Global Week of Action Against Small Arms Somalia 2005 Somaliweyn
- ^ Somalia: Fire destroys main Bakara Market in the capital SomaliNet
- ^ Somalia’s Islamists begin collecting taxes in Mogadishu’s markets Shabelle Media Network
- ^ Islamists Abandon Somalia's Capital Associated Press
- ^ Everyone in Somalia's capital has a gun — everyone, that is, but the police Associated Press, January 3, 2006