Recent reports from regions in Somalia bordering Ethiopia and Kenya reveal that Shabaab has increasingly turned to human smugglers to recruit individuals, including women and children, into their ranks. By paying these smugglers, the group is exploiting vulnerable populations, forcing them into servitude and combat roles…
Challenges Driving Recruitment Tactics
Over the past two years, Al-Shabaab has suffered considerable losses, with thousands of fighters killed in combat against the Somali National Army and ATMIS forces. The group’s declining influence has been exacerbated by widespread rejection from Somali citizens, particularly after Somali Islamic scholars officially declared Shabab as “Khawarij” (heretics).
Families in areas under their control often go to great lengths to remove children, particularly boys as young as 10, to protect them from forced recruitment. This has severely limited the group’s ability to source fighters locally.
Exploitation of Ethiopian Migrants
To address this recruitment crisis, Shabab has turned to Ethiopian human smugglers who target young Ethiopian Muslims with false promises of employment in Somalia. Local residents, such as Adan Ahmed from Cadaado in Galmudug State, report a steady influx of these individuals, primarily young boys and women from Ethiopia’s Muslim minority. According to Adan, many of these migrants arrive desperate, seeking work or even basic sustenance.
While local humanitarian workers provide some support, state authorities appear slow to respond to the unfolding crisis, Women face horrific conditions, often sold as sex slaves for prices ranging from $150 to $200. Men between the ages of 15 and 32 are sold for $250 to $400 and either forced to work or sent to the frontlines as a combatant
Local Efforts and Testimonies
Ali, a truck driver who helped rescue an Ethiopian woman from Shabab controlled territory, recounted her ordeal. She had been trafficked, enslaved, and forced to work under brutal conditions. With the help of local Somali donations, she was sent back to her home country. Ali explained that this pattern of abuse is prevalent in multiple regions, including Puntland, Jubaland, and the South West State. Despite local outcry, coordinated governmental intervention remains insufficient.
The situation calls for urgent action from both Somali authorities and international partners to dismantle these trafficking networks, protect vulnerable populations, and address the root causes of exploitation.