Abstract

On 11 th of July 2010; as funs watched FIFA World Cup Finals around world, two separate suicide bombings rocked Kampala, Uganda leading to deaths of 79 people and injuring many others. Al-Shabaab, a fundamentalist group in Somalia immediately claimed responsibility. These events sparked widespread debate within scholarly circles as far as counter-terrorism agenda in Greater Horn of Africa is concerned. In recent years, terrorism has grown to become a vice of global magnitude. The Greater Horn of Africa has had its own share of terror attacks and terrorism-related activities since late 1990s. The resilient anarchy in Somalia seems to have worsened picture. Six years after formation of Transitional Federal Government in October 2004, Somalia is yet to have a fully operational government. This state of affairs, coupled with similar regional challenges made Greater Horn an easy target for global crime syndicates- piracy, drugs and light weapons trafficking and most notably, international terrorism. Since late 2006, Somalia seems to be epicentre of Islamic fundamentalism of kind witnessed in Middle-East in recent years. The countries in region more often than not, are unable to tame vice as they were plagued by internal challenges- active and/or potential conflicts amongst them. It is against this background that this paper sought to explore challenges facing counter terrorism agenda in Horn of Africa with a view to assessing evolving terrorism threat with specific reference to Somalia and further charting way forward on same. The researcher arrived at conclusion that; international terrorist activities are not a preserve of any single country. It has both short and long-term effect on almost any country. The structural features on which terrorism thrives; particularly poverty, ignorance, bad governance, disorder and insecurity all need to be addressed not only as the Somali problem but one that involves all state and non-state actors in Greater Horn of Africa. This calls for concerted economic, political and security cooperation now and in future. Key words: Somalia, terrorism, Al-Shabaab

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