The northern coast of present-day
Somalia has always been of interest for strategic and commercial
reasons because of its location near the Bab El Mandeb straight at
the entrance to the Red Sea. In the mid-16th century the
great Ottoman Empire annexed the port of Zeila and provided
protection, at a cost collected through customs and other charges,
for Arab, Persian and Indian merchants who serviced the trade
requirements of the surrounding area and the Abyssinian hinterland.
In 1870 the ambitious Khedive Ismael I of Egypt, whose country was
nominally part of the Ottoman Empire, obtained the Ottoman Sultan’s
authorized rights over Zeila in exchange for paying an annual fee of
sterling pounds 18,000.
Left: A map showing the strategic importance of Somaliland
The Khedive also dispatched a force to
occupy Harrar in the interior, and acquired the coast between Bulhar
and Berbera without reference to the Sultan. Egyptian occupation of
the region continued (Khedive Ismael even briefly occupied Kismayu in
1875, near the present-day border between Somalia and Kenya) until in
1877 Britain signed a convention recognizing the Khedival annexation
of all the East African coast north of Ras Hafun (the promontory of
land jutting out into the Indian Ocean south of Cape Gardafui),
providing that no portion of it should be ceded to any foreign power
and that British consular agents should be appointed at places on the
coast. The Sultan of Turkey refused to ratify this agreement even
though the Ottoman Empire had never displayed interest in the
coastline eastwards from Zeila, but Egypt and Britain got on with
their business nevertheless.
Shipwrecked on the Horn of Africa: The French "Aveyron" sinks off Ras Hafun HERE
The Egyptians found that Somaliland
presented a hard, uncompromising environment for development. Behind
the coast is an arid plain, extremely hot in summer, extending up to
50 miles in width that leads into a broken mountain range averaging
4,000 to 5,000 feet in height. This range, subject to periods of
cold driving mist in winter, parallels the coast and slopes away to
the south as a waterless plateau of gently rolling plains sometimes
covered by thick grass or bush and forest. Barren areas of stony
ground display many red termite mounds. This area is known as the
Haud. But as Egypt had opened the Suez Canal in 1869 the interest
lay in the coastline rather than the interior. At coastal locations
lighthouses, harbours, piers, blockhouses and barracks were
constructed, and running water supplies engineered. Many of these
facilities improved the lives of the Somalis who fished or carried
cargo and passengers along the coast in dhows. Those inhabitants of
the region who lived as pastoralists on the coastal plain and the
Haud now found a ready market for their livestock at the new ports.
The British garrison and settlement in Aden, 150 miles north of and
opposite from Berbera, became a big customer for Somali “meat on
the hoof”.
Neue Tabelle
Zeile 2
In 1884 Egypt was facing the Mahdist
revolt in the Sudan and for financial reasons (dictated by Britain)
had to curtail its projects along the Somaliland coast. By agreement
with Britain the Egyptian flag remained flying in Somaliland but
Egyptian troops and officials were withdrawn and replaced by a very
few British troops, ships and officials from Aden. Aden was
garrisoned and maintained by British India, but for political
direction British Somaliland deferred to the British Consul-General
in Egypt, Major Evelyn Baring (later the First Earl of
Cromer). The Indian government’s attitude was that Somaliland had
to fund itself through customs dues for all its required expenditure.
Since 1880 the British Acting First
Assistant Resident in Aden, Captain Frederick Mercer Hunter, had kept
in readiness for intervention in Somaliland 40 men of the Aden
Police. These men were specially trained in marksmanship and the use
of a three-pound field gun. Hunter selected the Aden Second
Assistant Resident, Langton Prendergast Walsh (Right), who was a former
Commander of the Aden Settlement Police to be a Vice-Consul and the
British local commander in Somaliland. Walsh was given appointment
in Somaliland as the representative of His Highness the Khedive of
Egypt. Hunter installed Walsh and his 40 Aden policemen in Berbera.
Zeila, still being a Turkish Pashalic (an area governed by a Pasha of
Turkey) was treated separately as a British Agency, and another
British officer was posted there. Meanwhile other European powers
were searching this area of Africa to see what possessions they could
obtain due to the Egyptian withdrawal. Germany tried and failed to
get a foothold in northern Somaliland but was more successful at
Kismayu (see WITU 1890 article); France secured Obock (now
part of Djibouti) and later had to forcibly eject a Russian landing
party that seized a fort nearby; and in 1885 Italy secured the port
of Massawa (with a little covert help from the British who wanted to
thwart French ambitions) in what is now Eritrea. Britain’s motives
for securing the Somaliland coast lay in its strategic value to the
Suez Canal route to India and its proximity to Aden, and thus other
nations had to be prevented from seizing it. Once again the interior
of Somaliland was of little political or commercial interest.
The Royal Navy initially stationed a
ship at Berbera to provide Walsh with some firepower, but Hunter’s
political tactics were not based on force, as both he and Walsh
regarded the use of force as a failure for diplomacy. Treaties of
protection were signed by the British with those Somali tribes that
were amenable. Walsh recruited 50 to 60 more men in Berbera, mostly
Somalis but including a few Arabs, Baluch, Pathans and Turkish
deserters from Yemen. Teams were trained to operate two
man-harnessed three-pounder field guns left by the Egyptians, and a
couple of instructors from the 4th Bombay Rifles, Indian
Army, were obtained to teach infantry skills and run a rifle range.
Independent rather than volley fire was stressed, and bugle calls
initiated as a means of passing tactical orders. The police were
titled The Somali Coast Police. Walsh also mounted former Egyptian
swivel guns on a barge and on his residence, and used some of his
stock of 300 former Egyptian Remington rifles to arm a locally raised
force named the Biladiehs that was hired out to guard traders’
camel convoys on inland journeys. The Remingtons could also be
issued to arm friendly tribesmen when Walsh needed additional
manpower to defend Berbera or Bulhar from bands of mounted raiders
descending on the towns.
The Aden garrison also posted one
infantry company (no more than 120 men) at a time to Somaliland that
was dispersed as required between Zeila, Berbera and Bulhar.
Detachments of Bombay Sappers and Miners could also be deployed to
Somaliland for special tasks, as could a detachment of the Aden
Troop, a unit of Indian Army cavalry formed to garrison Aden. Walsh
also needed some mobile police and so he raised a camel-mounted
detachment of around 25 men. For tactical reasons he used an Indian camel saddle that carried two men, but
Somalis and Arabs were not interested in changing their own styles of
solo-riding and so Walsh recruited his Camel Sowars from India.
Left: Camels with double saddles
When Somalis from the interior visited
Berbera they invariably carried a shield, two spears and a short
sword mounted on the waist, and these weapons could cause frightful
wounds. Over time and with the assistance of the local akils (tribal
and clan leaders) it became customary for the weapons of visitors to
be temporarily deposited in the town police station. However on one
occasion two groups of young warriors started fighting each other
outside the town limits and a few Police were dispatched to stop the
affray. Both groups of warriors then turned on the Police and one
Afghan Constable had a barbed spear head driven through his jaw
whilst another was left with one leg hanging on by a strip of flesh,
necessitating amputation. A third Policeman died of wounds.
Right: Young Somali men
In such
cases the Police requested medical support from any visiting naval
ship or from an Indian Hospital Assistant eventually hired by Walsh
when sufficient customs receipts became available. Wild animals also
presented threats and on one occasion a lion leaped over a zareba (a
defensive circular thorn-tree barrier), seized a sleeping Police
sentry who should have been awake, and leaped back into the night.
Next day the victim’s boots were found with his feet inside, but
that was all.
From time to time punitive expeditions
had to be mounted against raiders who swooped down to remove
livestock belonging to tribes under British protection. A typical
example was in 1888 when the Jibril Abuker clans needed disciplining,
and Hunter and Walsh rode forth with their Police, Friendlies and
Biladiehs accompanied by whatever elements of the Indian troops from
Aden that could be spared.
Invariably the best tactic that the
British could employ was to delay the raiders from returning home
directly with their slow-moving stolen herds, as this delay was
seized upon by all the raiders’ neighbours who immediately took
advantage of the raiding parties’ absence to themselves seize the
raiders’ domestic herds! On this occasion as on others the Jibril
Abuker had to abandon their recently stolen stock in order to get
home quickly and try to retrieve their own domestic herds from their
neighbours.
A more serious situation arose in 1890
when the Mamasan section of the White Aysa tribe living on the plain
southeast of Zeila made several raids on herds outside Zeila and
Bulhar. The following troops were dispatched from Aden to Zeila:
2 companies of the 17th
Bombay Infantry (224 Sepoys)
Cavalry from the Aden Troop (64
Sowars)
Arab Levies (20 riflemen)
A Troop of Bombay Sappers and Miners
(30 Sappers)
Royal Navy personnel manning two
machine guns (13 Bluejackets)
At Zeila they were joined by a
detachment of about 150 men from Walsh’s Somali CoastPolice, Mounted Friendlies and Biladieh Riflemen.
A garrison of 51 of the Aden troops remained in Zeilah and the
remainder of the Zeilah Field Force as it was now named moved into
enemy territory. On 19th January a troop of 36 cavalry
Sowars raided White Aysa herds near Garissa, 50 miles south of
Zeila, and after killing some tribesmen and taking others prisoner
the troops removed 100 camels and a large flock of sheep. The camels
and prisoners were marched back into camp before dusk, but the Sowars
with the slower moving sheep were ambushed during the night and lost
one Indian officer and ten men killed. Meanwhile the camp had not
been well-located and had been sited too late in the day resulting in
the zareba not being built sufficiently wide or high. The horses and
camels were hobbled in the centre of the zareba and a perimeter
defence organized. Just before dawn an alert naval gunner opened
fire as up to 40 White Aysa used their spears to pole-vault over the
zareba and attack the troops. Rifle fire inside the circular zareba
was too dangerous to use as it endangered other defenders, so the
senior officer Colonel Stace ordered a charge at the enemy by those
armed with revolvers and swords. Other attackers lurking in the
surrounding bushes declined to follow their pole-vaulting comrades
and so the defenders cut down the intruders and cleared the zareba,
but not before the British troops had suffered 34 casualties.
The Zeila Field Force now withdrew onto
the coast and Colonel Stace, after ordering ‘No Move from the
present location’, rode the 80 miles along the shore to Bulhar to
signal for reinforcements from Aden. However the Aden Troop
commander, Captain J.R.C. Domvile, was ambitious and he wanted
revenge for his dead Sowars. Domvile moved out with the cavalry,
infantry and Bluejackets to confront the White Aysa again (Walsh
obeyed orders and refused to move).
Another enemy ambush was
successfully sprung and 13 Sowars were killed whilst half the cavalry
mounts were killed or stolen. Domvile’s horseless men made it on
foot back to the infantry position and another withdrawal was made to
Walsh’s firm base on the coast. When Colonel Stace arrived back he
found that his force was now incapable of further operations, and the
Aden troops sailed back home from Zeila. As he watched the Aden
troops depart Walsh received notification that he had been created a
Companion of the Most Eminent Order of the Indian Empire (C.I.E.). (Left)
Politically all was not lost as the offending clans, having enjoyed a
good fight, now submitted and agreed to cease raiding and to allow
safe passage through their territory to caravans.
Whilst the government of India had no
intention of financially supporting the British administration in
Somaliland, the region was of use to India. Camels were purchased at
Berbera for use by Indian Army units operating at Suakin in Sudan,
and Somali military labourers were attracted for the same theatre.
However the latter were prevented from enrolling on religious grounds
by local adherents of the Mahdi and friends of Osman Digna, these two
gentlemen being Britain’s principal foes in the Sudan.
Indian Army officers began to visit
Somaliland for the big-game hunting and two of them, Captain Harald
G.C. Swayne, Royal Engineers, and his brother Captain Eric Swayne,
16th Bengal Native Infantry, contributed significantly to
the surveying and mapping of the interior. Eric Swayne was to return
to Somaliland as the British commander in the 1901 and 1902 campaigns
against Mullah Muhammad Abdullah.
Right: Outside the Zeila Courthouse
In December 1892 Walsh became ill
whilst serving as Agent at Zeila and he was transferred to a
political post in India. His time was up but both he and Hunter had,
by use of a paternalistic approach accepted by the indigenous akils,
contributed immensely in establishing the British administration on
the Somali coast. But times were changing, Abyssinia had seized
Harrar and was encouraged to move into the Ogaden – one of those
“give-away” moments in colonial history that become forever
regretted because of the ensuing bloodshed. The French moved their
base from Obock to Djibouti and in 1894 started a railroad up into
Abyssinia, thus making Zeila become a backwater port, the British
ceding Ras Djibouti to France as part of a boundary settlement. In
the same year the Italian Protectorate running from the east of
British Somaliland to Cape Gardafui and down to the Juba River was
recognized by Britain.
Professional British diplomats saw
their opportunity and in 1898 the Foreign Office took over the
running of Somaliland from the Indian government, Walsh and Hunter’s
administrative records being deliberately destroyed in the take-over.
Important new procedures for British officials were pondered over
and introduced, such as what size of a gun-salute the Governor was
entitled to. The following year saw the commencement in British
Somaliland of one of the toughest and longest guerrilla wars that
Britain had to face anywhere in the world.
SOURCES:
The Scramble for Africa by
Thomas Pakenham.
Official History of the Operations
in Somaliland 1901-1904. Under the Flag and Somali Coast
Stories by L.P. Walsh.
Frontier and Overseas Expeditions
from India Volume VI. The King’s African Rifles by
Lt Col H. Moyse-Bartlett.
Early Days in Somaliland and Other
Tales by H.G.C. Swayne