John Drysdale | |
Other Names: | Abbas Idris |
Birth Date: | 21 May 1925 |
Birth Place: | United Kingdom |
Death Date: | 10 July 2016 (aged 91) |
Death Place: | Somaliland |
Burial Place: | Hargeisa |
Nationality: | British |
Citizenship: | Somaliland citizenship / British citizenship - dual citizenship |
Alma Mater: | Oxford University |
Notable Works: |
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John Gordon Stewart Drysdale (21 May 1925 – 10 July 2016), also known as Abbas Idriss, was a British-born army officer, diplomat, writer, historian, and businessman. He spent much of his life in Somalia, Somaliland and Singapore. Drysdale would serve as an advisor to three successive Somali prime ministers in the 1960s and later for three successive United Nations special envoys during the international intervention in the Somali Civil War.[1] He would also serve as a mediator between warring factions in Mogadishu during 1992 and 1993.[2]
Drysdale, who spoke fluent Somali, was widely regarded as a foreign expert on Somali culture, history, literature and society. He has also authored several books and founded numerous important academic journals and publications.[3]
Drysdale served in the British Army during World War II and later became an army officer. He first introduced to Somalis when he was deployed to the then-protectorate of British Somaliland in 1943. As a teenage Lieutenant in the British Army he served in the First Somali Battalion (of the two entirely Somali Battalions raised by the Kings African Rifles)[4] during the Burma Campaign against the Japanese and commanded a mortar unit.[5] Drysdale would later recount his experiences with Somali soldiers during the war, stating:
If Somalis accept the inevitability of battle, as the British Army's First Somali Battalion did during World War II in Burma, they enter into it whole heatedly. Cowardice has no role. Audacity is the norm, matched with staunchness in defence, despite poor fire discipline and a tendency in the Burma campaign, after orders for an attack had been issued, to have an independent cocky view of such orders. They had better plans than those of their British officers. Following their own independent ideas as to how the enemy should be engaged, they often proved themselves to have been right but equally often died in the process. It was the Somalis' inconquerable spirit in battle which impressed British officers who served with them in the Burma Campaign.[6]After the war he retired from the British Army at the rank of Major and pursued education at Oxford University. He joined the Colonial Service and its successor, the Foreign Service, which allowed him to return to postings in Africa. During the 1950s he served in the Gold Coast (present-day Ghana), British Somaliland and the British Military Administration in Ogaden and Haud. He was a participant of the 1956 Harar Border Conference between Halie Selassie's Ethiopian Empire and the British government.[7]
Somalia became an independent country in 1960, following the union of the former British Somaliland and the UN Trust Territory of Somaliland. In the years following independence, John Drysdale served as a representative of the British Foreign Service to the Somali Republic.[8]
During Drysdale's service in 1963, the British decided against unifying the Somali-inhabited Northern Frontier District (NFD) with Somalia post-Kenya's independence. A staunch supporter of the Somali cause, Drysdale resigned and later penned two detailed articles in the Somali journal Dalka, expressing his sharp disagreement with the British government's policy. As a result he soon after became a political advisor to the then Somali prime minister.[9] Drysdale served as an advisor to three successive Prime Ministers of Somalia following independence. He soon spoke fluent Somali, and became widely regarded as a foreign expert on Somali culture, history, literature and society. Drysdale later expressed the view that Abdirazak Haji Hussein was the "...best Prime Minister Somalia ever had"[10]
During his service with the Somali Republic he authored his first book, The Somali Dispute in 1964. That same year he founded the academic journal Africa Research Bulletin, based in the United Kingdom.
After the 1969 Somali coup d'état he left Somalia and did not return until the fall of Siad Barre's government in 1991. In 1977, Halgan, the Official Journal of the ruling Somali Revolutionary Socialist Party described Drysdale as "...very knowledgeable about Somali history".[11]
He also wrote extensively on other regions Africa and Southeast Asia. He also founded the Asia Research Bulletin, which was published in Singapore in a partnership with the Straits Times Group. Drysdale lived in Singapore for a time and his 1984 book, Singapore Struggle for Success, a history of modern Singaporean society, is still studied by the country's students.
Singapore's longest serving police chief, Goh Yong Hong, described Drysdale as a foreign expert on Singaporean society. The Singapore Police Force would significantly assist Drysdale while he wrote a book on the nations police titled In the Service of the Nation, published in 1985.[12]
During the UN intervention in Somalia in 1992 and 1993, Drysdale was hired by UNOSOM II for his expertise on Somalia and was assigned to three successive UNOSOM II special envoys. Drysdale first became involved in the intervention as a consultant for UNOSOM I and as a UNDP contractor in 1992. As his UNDP contract was set to expire, he was hired by UNOSOM II.[13] [14] He would be responsible for initiating the establishment of a UNOSOM supported police service throughout Somalia.[15]
Drysdale would push against the idea of UNOSOM II forces conducting disarmament in Somalia, as he believed it was impossible.[16]
He would be a vocal supporter of political reconciliation with Gen. Mohammed Farah Aidid and the Somali National Alliance instead of the UNOSOM manhunt that would follow the 5 June attack on the Pakistanis. He resigned as an adviser on September 30, 1993, distressed by the United Nations emphasis on military operations against the Somali National Alliance and mounting collateral damage being inflicted by UNOSOM on Somali civilians.[17] [18] A few days later, following the disastrous Battle of Mogadishu, President Bill Clinton would relent on the American lead hunt for Aidid and begin to closely follow the diplomatic resolution that had been initially proposed by Drysdale months earlier.[19]
The following year he would write and publish a book on the failures of the United Nations Intervention based on his experiences titled Whatever Happened to Somalia.
In 1994, John Drysdale moved to Somaliland, working in part as an advisor to then-President Muhammad Haji Ibrahim Egal. Drysdale would serve as a spokesman for the presidency for a time.[20]
He established a land survey NGO, called Cadastral Surveys,[21] [22] which mapped and established farm boundaries in Gabiley and Dilla in the country's west. In the years following he succeeded in surveying 10,800 farms, determining ownership in coordination with local elders. Most notably his project issued ownership documentation along with identity papers to local farmers. This effort significantly reduced local tensions in Gabiley District.[23] A UN report would later note that it was, "...clear that Drysdale’s in-depth knowledge of the people of the area and the community-based methodology (involving elders in verification) were crucial to the success of the programme and its impact on peace"[24]
In 2002, he would become a member of the first Board of Trustees of Edna Adan Hospital in Hargeisa.[25]
In 2009, Drysdale would convert to Islam at ceremony held in Hargeisa's main Mosque and changed his name to Abbas Idris and became an official Somaliland citizen shortly after.[26] According to Drysdale, he had begun seriously considering converting to Islam a decade earlier. Notably, he would become the first Caucasian to vote in Somaliland elections after he acquired dual citizenship.[27]
He would later marry and spend the last years of his life living in Gabiley, Somaliland.
Drysdale would die on 10 July 2016 following a short illness.[28]
A state funeral was held at the Maslah Muslim burial grounds in Hargeisa on 12 July 2016. Dignitaries in attendance at his funeral included President of the Republic of Somaliland, Ahmed Mohamed Mohamoud, members of the British representative office in Somaliland – and the high emissary of the British Embassy in Ethiopia.