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After one of the worst terror attacks of 2017, people have noticed a blistering silence

Sophia Akram by Sophia Akram
17 October 2017
in Global
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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Somalia just endured one of the worst attacks in its history. But many people are asking where all the outrage is.

Twitter users clearly felt as though the world was ignoring the horrendous attack that left hundreds dead:

Imagine if 250+ ppl in the US or UK or France were killed in a truck bomb. That’s what just happened in Somalia. They deserve to be mourned.

— Clint Smith (@ClintSmithIII) October 16, 2017

Found out 500 people have been killed in Somalia in a terrorist attack. Why isn’t this getting more attention? My love to those effected

— Daz Black (@daz_black) October 16, 2017

Double standards?

According to reports, more than 300 people have died and at least 400 people have been injured in Somalia. The attack took place on Saturday 14 October when two bombs exploded in the country’s capital city, Mogadishu. No one has claimed responsibility for the blasts yet; though they have signs of an al-Shabaab style attack, including the use of a truck bomb. The Guardian is now reporting, meanwhile, that the culprit may have been a “former soldier in Somalia’s army whose home town was raided by local troops and US special forces two months ago in a controversial operation in which 10 civilians were killed“.

Major news outlets like BBC News, Channel 4 News and The Guardian are reporting the incident. But some have asked why it did not receive the same air time as other recent attacks:

When terrorists struck Somalia, the world was silent. No talk-show posturing. No wall-to-wall coverage.

This is shameful. We can do better. pic.twitter.com/Xw6iUxLQuz

— The Root (@TheRoot) October 16, 2017

https://twitter.com/sahluwal/status/920081279575457792

Even MPs made the same point:

In Foreign Office Qs Henry Bellingham points out, rightly, how little air time is being given to the Somalia bomb- the worst ever in Africa.

— Zac Goldsmith (@ZacGoldsmith) October 17, 2017

And many felt that the response would have been very different if the attack was on Western soil. For instance, a shooting that took place in Las Vegas on 1 October saw the hashtag #PrayforVegas trending on Twitter:

https://twitter.com/AnaluWelch/status/920029133005996032

The # of people killed in Somalia yesterday was 12x more than the # killed in Manchester in May (276 to 22) But it got 120x lesser coverage

— Ugochukwu (@EkeVanVictor) October 16, 2017

Imagine a time when 230 people could be blown up in Somalia but all the news would talk about was how the sky was a bit yellow

— Brendan Walsh (@BWalsh__) October 17, 2017

Not everyone was quiet, though. Paris’s Eiffel Tower, for example, did mourn the deaths in Somalia. And some felt this was important:

Thank you Paris for dimming Eiffel Tower lights in solidarity with hundreds killed in Somalia, while most of the world turned a blind eye 🙏🏾 pic.twitter.com/2HaBQP214R

— Ulrich Janse van Vuuren (@UlrichJvV) October 16, 2017

If they didn't pay tribute to the bombing in Somalia, we would have cited the double standard. Important to see and note effort. https://t.co/8KUbpnHzmY

— Hend Amry (@LibyaLiberty) October 17, 2017

The root of terror

The attack in Mogadishu is reportedly the worst to hit Somalia, even though al-Qaeda’s allies in al-Shabaab still control many areas in the country.

The terrorist network emerged in the 2000s. While US-backed warlords reportedly used to govern Somalia, a group of militias joined forces to take over the capital and other parts of the country. And the US soon started a proxy war to drive them out. They eventually turned into al-Shabaab, which put itself at the front of the fight against ‘foreign occupation’.

What has followed is starvation and disease, as well as terrorism. And Thomas Mountain, an independent journalist working in the region, has spoken about how Somalis have helped themselves better than the international community has helped them.

It now seems to some as though the world is leaving Somalia hanging again after this latest atrocity.

The media coverage doesn’t seem to be cutting it when it comes to terrorism outside the Western world. Attacks on African soil still need and deserve the commentary, analysis and solidarity that occurs after other attacks. This is not least because Western intervention seems too often to be so closely linked to the root of terror.

It’s time we shift the balance of coverage and stand with absolutely everyone who suffers at the hands of terrorism.

Get Involved!

– Post your support for Somalia on social media using the hashtags #IamSomalia and #IamMogadishu.

– Read more of The Canary‘s Global coverage and follow us on Facebook and Twitter.

Featured image via Twitter screenshot

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