Dhulbahante

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Main article: Somali clan

The Dhulbahante is a Somali sub clan of the Harti part of the Koombe and of Kablalax, of the Darod tribes. The Dhulbahante have played a key role in the history of Somalia. Great Britain, Italy, and France considered the Dhulbahante a major oppositional power to their colonisation of the Horn of Africa and interests. The Dhulbahante fought against colonisation in battles such as Afbakayle, Beerdhiga, Cagaarwayne, Daratoole, Dayuuraddii, Fardhidin, Jidbaale and Ruugga and thus viewed themselves as the sole protector of greater Somalia because of their huge loss of life and wealth and resented the signatory tribes. After the long Anglo-Dervish wars the British colonial leaders did not trust the Somalis. Under the leadership of Mohammed Abdullah Hassan, Dulbahantes conducted resistance against the Ethiopians and British, a struggle that devastated the Somali Peninsula and resulted in the death of an estimated one-third of northern Somalia's population from 1899 to 1920. The dervish uprising ended in 1920 with the deployment of a British Royal Air Force's aerial bombardment (Africa's first) of the dervish capital at Taleex in northern Somalia[1].

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[edit] Territory

Dhulbahante members are found in their traditional territories such as the northern regions of Sool, Nugaal, Sanaag, Ayn (a new province separated from Togdheer), Kismayo and the Somali Region of Ogaden.

[edit] Tradition

There are 15 current active Garaads and Ugaas (Clan Chiefs) all clan chiefs strongly oppose the existence of somaliland see the Boocame Declaration by Dulbahante Traditional clan chiefs for reference, though members of the public change allegiance to Somaliland, Puntland or Greater Somalia and there might be members of Dhulbahante aligned with Somaliland as well as Puntland and Greater Somalia[2]

Traditionally, Dulbahante clan is known as fierce nationalist warriors, who fought against Ethiopian expansion to their territories and rejected to sign protectorate treaty (common British tool to subjugate colonized Africans) to surrender to the British Colonial Rule. Under the leadership of Sayid Mohammed Abdullah Hassan, they waged war against the British and Ethiopia for over twenty years, which ended with British Royal Air Force bombing their command center in Taleex, in 1920. The Dulbahante clan lost nearly half of its population in this struggle and as result, they natually support Greater Somalia [3]

[edit] Some sub-clans

There is no clear agreement on the clan and sub-clan structures. For a comparison of different views on the clan-lineage-structures see the World Bank's Conflict in Somalia: Drivers and Dynamics.

  • Dhulbahante
    • Xuseen Saciid
    • Muuse Saciid
    • Axmed Saciid
      • Cabdale Muuse
      • Cisman Muse
      • Maxmed Muse
      • Barre Muse
      • Abokar Muse
      • Abdale Muse
        • Yaxye Abdale
        • Habar-Waa Abdale
          • Khalid Habar-Waa
          • Shirshore Habar-Waa
          • Xasan Ugaas
          • Hamud Ugaas
          • Mahmoud Ugaas
      • Garad Farah
      • Mahmud Garad
      • Abdi Garad
      • Caligaraad
      • Bahararsame
      • Barkat
      • Axmed Garad
      • Garad Yaasiin
      • Jamac Siyaad
      • Ugaadyaahan Siyaad
      • Umar Wacays
      • Naleeye Axmed
      • Nuur Axmed
      • Waacays Abdule
      • Maxamud Ugaadhyahan
      • Caligari Axmed
      • Adan Axmed
      • Odala Ahmed
      • Cigaal Nalayeey
      • Hasan Sahabeel
      • Cali Naaleeye
      • Gibril Naaleey
      • Cilmi Naaleeye
      • Adan Naaleeye

[edit] Notable Dhulbahante people

  • Mohamed Abdi Hashi, interim President of Puntland, October 2004 - January 2005
  • Ali Khalif Galeyr, former Prime Minister under the Transitional National Government
  • Abdi Bile, a former middle distance runner from Somalia and 1500 m world champion in 1987

[edit] References

  1. ^ http://www.civicwebs.com/cwvlib/africa/somalia/1994/dawn_of_civilization/chapter_10.htm
  2. ^ Somalia: The Bo'ame Declaration of Dhulbahante Clan Elders
  3. ^ Imhotep: The Collective African Blog: Somalia: When a Nation Chases a State