Other Definitions
mogadishu (dest)
mogadishu (dict)

Mogadishu

Mogadishu (Somali: Muqdisho) is a city in eastern Africa, on the Indian Ocean. It is the largest city in Somalia and the nominal seat of a provisional national authority, but no effective government has existed in the country for over a decade. As of 2004, the population is estimated to be around 2,450,000. Mogadishu is the country's largest city, a major seaport, and a commercial and financial center. Its principal industries are food and beverages and textiles. The city is linked by road with other cities in the country as with Kenya and Ethiopia. Limited air service is available.

History

Mogadishu was founded by Arab Muslim settlers in the 10th century, according to Ross E. Dunn (The Adventures of Ibn Battuta 1986). As Dunn explains, Mogadishu and other East African Muslim settlements were "a kind of medieval America, a fertile, well-watered land of economic opportunity and a place of salvation from drought, famine, overpopulation, and war at home." Many came from the Arabian Peninsula and their relative affluence in their new homes made them powerful, and inter-marriage with the locals produced economically beneficial relationships. Mogadishu was the most northern of the East African City states. It prospered with trade from the interior and Islam came to spread over Somalia. When he visited Mogadishu around 1330, Ibn Battuta was impressed at the abundance of food he saw, remarking that a single person "eats as much as a whole company of us would eat, as a matter of habit, and they are corpulent and fat in the extreme." The origin of the name is unclear; one version claims it as the Somali version of the Arabic name "maqad shah" (imperial seat of the shah), another version claims that it is a Somali version of the Swahili "mwyu ma" (last northern city). Among the city's historic buildings are the Mosque of Fakr ad-Din (1269) and Garesa Palace, built in the late 19th century for the local administrator of the sultan of Zanzibar and now housing a museum and library. Mogadishu is the seat of the Somalia National University. In 1871 the city was occupied by the sultan of Zanzibar, who leased it to the Italians in 1892. In 1905 Italy purchased the city and made it the capital of its colony of Italian Somaliland, under the name Mogadiscio. Mogadishu was captured and occupied during World War II by British forces operating from Kenya. During Somalia's long civil war from the 1970s, rebel forces took the city in 1990. Intense battling between clan-based rebel factions damaged many parts of Mogadishu in 1991 and 1992. UN peacekeeping forces were stationed in the city between 1992 and 1995. On October 3, 1993, an attempt by the United States Army to capture lieutenants of the warlord Mohamed Farrah Aidid while successful, ended in a battle with heavy casualties. In the Battle of Mogadishu, 19 American soldiers were killed and several dozen were injured, but estimates put the number of Somali casualties at between 500-1000 militia and civilians killed and 3000-4000 injured. The events were later dramatised in the novel and film Black Hawk Down.

Mogadishu after UN withdrawal

Today Mogadishu continues to be one of the world's most dangerous cities (see Attacks on humanitarian workers), as clan and faction fighting rages unabated. The city is also the seat of the internationally-recognized Transitional National Government, ostensibly an interim government for the entire nation of Somalia whose practical influence does not extend beyond a few blocks from its headquarters. The situation is such that the body's parliament sits in Nairobi, Kenya, rather than remain in the city. The southern part of the city is more peaceful and also more modern, containing mansions and safe streets. The north side of the city is where the major clan warfare is, and is one of the most dangerous places in the world. Although there are problems, Mogadishu has somewhat recovered economically. The free trade in the absence of a government has made no real taxes. There is almost no real problems for the businessmen to make more money, as they have hired security to deal with the gunmen. This has made the city one of the cheapest (but dangerous) places to do business. Mogadishu is becoming a leader in Eastern Africa for telecommunications and the Internet as the city has a modern phone network. The city has numerous Internet cafes in a country that has almost as many users as all of Ethiopia, Djibouti or Eritrea.

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
omaha beach
operation fortitude
montmartre
engraving
foundation's edge
the caves of steel
prelude to foundation
foundation and earth
trantor
the foundation series
isaac asimov's robot series
isaac asimov's galactic empire series
three laws of robotics
wilson's disease
time enough for love
sjgren's syndrome
battle of tannenberg (1914)
roy lichtenstein
wireless community network
the rolling stones (novel)
the door into summer
jasper johns
farnham's freehold
2042
gary gordon
randy shughart
she done him wrong
state fair
the good earth (movie)
the maltese falcon
tidal locking
gaslight
it's a wonderful life
average
the red shoes
the treasure of the sierra madre
seven brides for seven brothers
szechuan pepper
bruce springsteen
karmapa
the castle of crossed destinies
if on a winter's night a traveler
list of films noir
henri matisse