Nowhere in the world is Shariah 
                more contested (yet seldom debated) than in war-weary Somalia 
                where each of the entities competing for power claims to have 
                embraced it while condemning its detractor, or rather, its enemy, 
                as a dangerous imposter.
               All 
                the colorful politics motivating each contender aside, the most 
                pressing question begging an answer is: Can lawless Somalia be governed by Shariah?
All 
                the colorful politics motivating each contender aside, the most 
                pressing question begging an answer is: Can lawless Somalia be governed by Shariah?
              Short answer: It depends!
              If by Shariah we mean the 
                Talibanesque, self-righteous, and unjust brand currently being 
                practiced by the Somali Neo-Islamists known as al-Shabab and Hizbul 
                Islam, the answer is: No.
              As these two groups have been 
                asserting their authority through violence-driven territorial 
                expansion, they have been rapidly loosing the public confidence 
                necessary for them to sustain any gains. Horrific accounts attesting 
                to their ignorance and to the cruelty of their method have been 
                stirring panic and cultivating hate. Stories such as the two Neo-Islamist 
                assassins who followed their victim-to-be into a mosque and prayed 
                alongside him only to shoot him in the head after he stepped outside 
                the mosque raise serious questions regarding these groups’ understanding 
                of Islam and Shariah.
              Theirs is an obtuse, if not 
                dysfunctional, interpretation of Shariah. They are oblivious to 
                the education-based societal transformation that the classic Shariah 
                seeks to achieve. To them, Shariah is a purposeless, uncompassionate, 
                punishment-driven set of laws that are arbitrarily implemented 
                without consideration of time, circumstances or objectives.
               Therefore, 
                it is a matter of time before the masses would conquer their collective 
                fear and revolt against this accountable to no one, selectively 
                oppressive, and entirely alien brand of Shariah.
Therefore, 
                it is a matter of time before the masses would conquer their collective 
                fear and revolt against this accountable to no one, selectively 
                oppressive, and entirely alien brand of Shariah.
              If, however, by Shariah we 
                mean the classic concept of Islamic governance adapted to address 
                contemporary political, social, economic, and spiritual challenges 
                in a just way, the answer is: Yes.
              As a country whose national 
                institutions have been utterly destroyed and almost all threads 
                that once wove its society together have been unraveled, Islam 
                is the only thread that remains intact. Therefore, adopting Shariah 
                as a set of rules, regulations, and values to govern Somalia 
                is not only feasible but perhaps the only sensible means to resuscitate 
                that dying state.
              Granted, the name “Shariah” 
                connotes a politically radioactive concept in the West and that 
                there are those who believe that Shariah and governance are mutually 
                exclusive; however, that is hardly a fair estimation of this profoundly 
                misconstrued system. [One might gain a broader perspective of 
                this concept by reading Noah Feldman of Harvard’s article “Why 
                Shariah?” published by N.Y. Times March 16, 2008]
              The Somali people are desperate 
                for a government and indeed a system of governance (any for that 
                matter) that they can invest their trust in; a system that protects 
                them against injustices and guards their God-given right to life, 
                to own property, to enjoy basic freedoms and to exercise their 
                freewill.
              Therefore, President Sharif 
                Sheikh Ahmed and his government would have to identify the most 
                crucial needs of the people.
              
              Granted, in a number of his 
                speeches while visiting the Somali Diaspora in the United 
                States, he highlighted security, humanitarian 
                needs, and capacity building as being his top priorities. While 
                no one would dispute the importance of these three, some question 
                ‘why is peace and reconciliation not part of the top three priorities?’ 
                They argue that there should be an ongoing process that resists 
                any temptation to give up prematurely.
              That being said, the model 
                of Shariah that is likely to succeed is the one that genuinely 
                addresses the following categories of needs: