Angry crowd
disrupts Somali meeting 'In Somalia the Somali Nomadics rape,
murder and kidnap the Somali Bantus'
January 25/2008
Western Cape/South Africa
What
was meant to be the inauguration ceremony of the newly elected
chairperson of the Somali Community Board of the Western Cape
ended in a confrontation after members of the audience slammed
the election process as "undemocratic".
On Tuesday night, about 250 Somalis
met at the Bellville Civic Centre to discuss what organizers termed
the "unity of Somalis living in the province and the election
of board members".
Members of the audience, however, claimed that they had been duped
and had been told that the aim of the meeting was to elect a chairperson.
The group disrupted proceedings when they shouted that they were
not involved in the election of chairperson Abdi Jidow.
"Who elected him? Why were
we not involved in the process?" said one irate person.
A group of men who said they belonged to the Somali Bantu community
then got on stage, wearing Somali Bantu T-shirts and waving the
Somali flag, and called on the audience to reject Jidow on the
grounds that the Somali Nomadics are oppressing them.
In Somalia the Somali Nomadics
rape, murder and kidnap the Somali Bantus.
"They oppress us; starve us from higher education and political
rights.
"We experienced that in Somalia and ran away from it and
now they want to oppress us again in a democratic South Africa,"
said Abdul Abdulahigwure.
Jidow was elected 10 days ago
after the slaying of Somali shopkeeper Mohammed Ali in his Sir
Lowry's Pass Superette. Ali, 27, was gunned down in the latest
incident of alleged xenophobic attacks against the immigrant community
which has seen 41 Somali spaza shop owners killed since last year.
"This is the first time
that we are trying to have an umbrella body to help the plight
of the Somalis but it can't be done if leaders are self elected,"
said Mitchells Plain resident Ahmed Puhir.
Ward councilor Jeffrey van Wyk,
People Against Suffering, Suppression, Oppression and Poverty
leader Braam Hanekom and the Bellville police station commissioner,
who were scheduled to speak, left shortly after the disruptions.
Police officers later arrived on the scene to calm the angry crowd
who later dispersed. 
After the event, organizer Ali
Noor said the board would ignore the "disruptive elements".
He said the representative body had not misled the public. "We
invited them saying that we needed to elect the board and that
the chairperson was already elected."
The body would retain Jidow as
chairperson and would reconvene a meeting to elect Board members,
he concluded.
Mohamed Farah Sidow
Western Cape/South
Africa