He will lead a team of young dedicare[sic] analysts trained in social media monitoring, targeting, grooming, and exploitation,” said Halane of Abdi who started his work with Sahan in January 2020.
The new strategy, aimed at deploying “operators” across the Horn of Africa region, assigned Bryden to “focus more on Sahan’s special monitoring, grooming and targeting [and] training programme,” said the memo.
Since then, the Sahan team has unloaded on Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy, Ahmed Presidents Isaias Afwerki of Eritrea and Farmajo of Somalia, spread
lies and
lies and
more lies. It also promoted
division and federalism in
Somalia, stoked chaos in Somalia, Ethiopia and
Eritrea, pushed for TPLF’s return to power in Ethiopia, insulted Islamic scholars and even the
Islamic religion itself, exaggerated
Tigrayans’ military power — all on the pretext of promoting democracy, women’s rights and peace in the region.
“Somali activists with genuine interest in the wellbeing of their country simply reject the disinformation machine that Bryden and his trolls want others to believe,” said Sanei, the PhD student in Ohio. “Those Somali activists who monitor the media are not all pro-government people. To say otherwise is to insult Somalis’ intelligence.”
Sahan’s policy change came almost a year after the Somali government banned the organization from operating inside the country on Dec. 17, 2018 because of concerns over “national security, stability and unity of the country.”
The government on April 15 charged Bryden, Rashid Abdi, New Zealander Robison Colin, Canadian Rahman Rage Khaire, Belgian Emmanuel Deisser and British David Hopkins with spying for and leaking Somalia’s national security information to foreign entities. The case’s
second hearing took place last week in the nation’s capital, Mogadishu.
The pushback by the Somali government, however, didn’t dissuade Sahan’s team, led by Bryden and Abdi, from ramping up its diatribe against President Farmajo, Spy Chief Fahad Yasin, national institutions, government officials, ordinary citizens and businesses.
Abdi’s and Bryden’s abusive attacks were not informed by values, but by a desperate bid to try to force the government to change its mind and allow Sahan back, says a former staff member who spoke to The Star on the condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals.
To explain the motive behind Sahan team’s insults further, the same source said when Sahan’s funds started to dry up after Mogadishu’s ban took effect, Bryden — who when the going gets tough or he runs into trouble with the Somali government or private citizens tries to turn Somalia’s clan system to his advantage — sent an emissary, a relative of President Farmajo, to the government to plead for a “live-and-let-live” truce, an overture spurned by President “Farmajo” and Spy Chief Yasin.
Incensed by this decision, Bryden doubled down on his venomous campaign to vilify the two.
In a July 13 hatchet job titled “Thinking the Unthinkable: Fahad’s Second Term,” Bryden sounded, as he usually does, a false alarm, warning that even if President Farmajo is re-elected fair and square “much of Somalia — including the capital — could become ungovernable.” This call for violence was later picked up by Sahan trolls, like
Adan Abdulle, a Somali-American who claimed that Mogadishu residents would not “tolerate” President Farmajo’s reelection.
Nevertheless, Bryden’s broadside against the spy chief, Yasin, has inadvertently unmasked the British’s man’s dislike for Somalia’s territorial integrity and particular liking for the defunct TPLF. He accused Yasin of being a part of the gallant and proud Somalis who defended their country from Ethiopia’s invasion of Gedo region in 1996, when Addis Ababa was ruled with iron fist by TPLF, a group the current Ethiopian government designated as terrorist.
Bryden’s obsession over Farmajo and Yasin is remarkable: The two men were instrumental in the current government’s policies that launched a drive to root out foreign agents from key government institutions. Bryden’s Sahan Research and others, including Sudan, the Netherlands, the United Arab Emirates, the FBI and the CIA, all had offices inside Somalia’s National Intelligence and Security Agency, or NISA, a Somali intelligence source told The Star on condition that his name not be published .
Another source told The Star that when Yasin took the helm of the agency, he was shocked to find an organization infiltrated by foreign spy agencies. Yasin then started a cleanup to weed out bad apples within the organization. The move deprived many foreign countries and organizations, including Sahan, of a crucial source of information. Unlike his predecessor Abdullahi Gaafaw, who helped Sahan get security contracts, according to
Fartaag Consulting’s report, Yasin expelled Sahan from Somalia.
Bryden’s fancy title — he calls himself a “senior strategic advisor” of Sahan — belies his wiliness, skullduggery, frivolousness, exploitation and unscrupulousness.
A day after he refused to answer The Star reporter’s questions, he sent him an email containing what he called “questions of my own.”
One of Bryden’s questions was: “Why did you choose journalism as a profession? Is it by choice or because you lack any other marketable skills?” Another was: “Who paid you to draft the article on Sahan and why now? When was it commissioned and how much are you being paid? What are is [sic] your sponsor hoping to achieve?” A third one was: “Please rank your financial sponsors on order of importance: National Security Office; Ministry of Planning and International Cooperation; NISA; AMISOM Political Affairs.”
Bryden’s brazen display of levity, arrogance and contempt for accountability and transparency is emblematic of the mistaken notion among many foreigners and international organisations in Somalia that they can get away with the crimes they commit in the country, where impunity has prevailed since the fall of the last central government in 1991. In his last article on Somalia, Abdi used the pronoun “we”, as if he and Bryden and other non-Somali team in Kenya are Somali — itself a weirdly new development.
But Somalis have woken up to this reality and are fighting back.
“Bryden, the archetype of an ungrateful and sinister guest, misconstrued Somalis’ generosity and courtesy as foolishness and naivete. What a foolish foreigner he’s,” said Ibi, the lawmaker. “You don’t bite the hand that feeds you, you deluded cad.”
Ibi said Somalis may “outwardly seem passive, but are indeed warriors who jealously guard their country against enemies.”
“We’re the owners of this strategic location in the world because we’re Somali and can defend it. Let that sink in,” said Ibi.
Bryden, abrasive as he’s, is still a sniveling wimp based on his interactions with others: Although he has a penchant for reviling President Farmajo and Spy Chief Yasin and other regional leaders, yet when Twitter users from Somalia, Ethiopia and Eritrea defending their nations’ leaders respond in kind, he promptly blocks them, accusing them of being trolls.
“Matt Bryden trades in falsehoods and disinformation that get crushed in their first encounter with the truth,” said Abdisamad, the director who accused Bryden’s Sahan of threatening his life.
“Bryden is like a liar or a thief, if you will, who doesn’t have the stomach to publicly defend himself, even from children,” said Abdisamad. “He turns tail and runs away the very moment he hears the sound of the truth. That is what Bryden does when he’s confronted with facts.”
"Now that Matt Bryden's cover has been blown, he should pack his bags and return to where he came from," said Somali-Canadian economist Fartaag.
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