Dokument #1292701
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Autor)
In separate interviews with the Research
Directorate, both a professor of Sociology at Central State
University, at Mount Pleasant, Michigan, who specializes in Somali
minority clans, and a Graduate student in the Faculty of Law at
Ottawa University, author of Clans, Sub-clans and Regional
Representation in the Somali Government Organisation 1960-1990:
Statistical Data and Findings, stated that the Mushunguli are
a Somali Bantu tribe. Before the civil war in 1991, the Mushunguli
used to inhabit the lower and upper Shaabeelle regions of Somalia
(15 Oct. 1998). According to Ethnologue: Languages of the
World, the Mushunguli, live in "Southern Somali, Jamaame
District of Lower Jubba Region, centred in Jamaame District, and
some in urban areas in nearby Kismaayo and in Muqdisho" (1992,
366).
Both sources stated that traditionally, the
Mushunguli were farmers and they formed a "caste" group of Somali
minorities known as the jareer or jirir. They explained
that mainstream Somalis look down upon them because of their slave
origins. The Mushunguli originated in the hinterland of East
Africa, particularly Tanzania, and they migrated to Somalia in
search of security from the slave-trade (ibid.). However, the
professor clarified that the real origins of the Mushunguli are
contested. He said that some historians trace their origins to
Tanzania but archeological data shows that they originated within
Somalia itself. However, but Ethnologue states that the
Mushunguli "descended from fugitive slaves who escaped from their
Somali masters in the Middle Shabeelle region around 1840, in
northeast Tanzania, they were called 'WaZegua'" (1992, 360).
The sources explained that their fertile
lands along the Shabeelle River have been expropriated by the
warring factions and so they were cast out of their lands. The
Mushunguli, they further stated, have been left without protection,
because they do not have a militia of their own. The graduate
student stated that the Mushunguli have been "totally abused" in
the Somali conflict. The Sociology professor explained that the
Mushunguli have been living in a "modern slavery type" situation.
He stated that the reasons for the current conflict between the
Somali warlords centre around the control of the farmlands,
particularly, the banana plantations, formerly cultivated by the
Mushunguli (ibid).
The professor further stated that, in
Somalia the Mushunguli together with the Midgan clans occupy the
lowest rank in the highly stratified Somali social system. During
the pre- the war period, the Mushunguli not play a significant role
in the social and economic system of Somalia, and, politically they
were marginalized.
The professor and the graduate student both
stated that in appearance, the Mushunguli are physically distinct
in from the rest of the Somalis. They do not intermarry with the
rest of the Somalis and they speak a language akin to the Swahili
of Tanzania and Mombasa. The professor clarified that, in addition
to their own language, the Mushunguli who live in urban areas of
Somalia would speak Somali, while those in the rural areas would
neither speak nor understand Somali. Ethonologue states
that "they [Mushunguli] do not mingle with other peoples of
Somalia, so the women do not learn Somali. The men learn Maay or
Somali as second Language" (1992, 366). For additional information
on the treatment of the jareer, please consult Response to
Information Request SOM27025.E of 13 June 1997.
This Response was prepared after
researching publicly accessible information currently available to
the Research Directorate within time constraints. This Response is
not, and does not purport to be, conclusive as to the merit of any
particular claim to refugee status or asylum.
References
Ethnologue: Languages of the
World. 1992. Edited Barbra F. Grimes. Dallas: Summer Institute
of Linguistics.
Graduate student in the Faculty of Law,
University of Ottawa, [Ottawa], and co-author of Clan:
Sub-clans and Regional Representation in the Somali Government
Organization 1960-1990: Statistical Data and Findings. 15 Dec.
1998. Telephone interview.
Professor of Sociology, specialist in
Somali minority clans, Central Michigan University, Mount Pleasant.
15 October 1998. Telephone interview.
Additional Sources Consulted
Africa Confidential [London].
January - August 1998. Nos. 1-17.
Africa Research Bulletin: Political,
Social and Cultural Series [Oxford]. January-July 1998. Vol.
35. Nos. 1-7.
Horn of Africa Bulletin
[Uppsala]. January-August 1998. Vol. 10. Nos. 1-4.
Cassanelli, Lee V. 1982. The Shaping
of Modern Somalia: Reconstructing the History of a Pastoral People,
1600-1900. Philadelphia: University of Pennyslvania Press.
Gilkes, P.S. September 1994. The
Price of Peace: Somalia and the United Nations 1991-1994.
Bedfordshire, U.K.: Save the Children Fund.
The Invention of Somalia.
Edited by Ali Jamale Ahmed. 1995. Lawrenceville, NJ: The Red Sea
Press.
Lewis, I.M. 1994. Blood and Bone:
The Call of Kinship in Somali Society. Lawrenceville, NJ: The
Red Sea Press.
_____. 1988. Rev. ed. A Modern
History of Somalia: Nation and State in the Horn of Africa.
Boulder, Col: Westview Press.
Electronic sources: IRB Databases,
LEXIS/NEXIS, Internet, REFWORLD, World News Connection (WNC).
Three oral sources consulted did not
provide information on the requested subject.