Skip to main content
Jump through story Start Story start 1 update
Resolved1 update Updated May 4

Firing squads, blast walls and dangerous diplomacy in Somalia

A navy flak jacket over his sky-blue shirt, Neil Wigan peered through the bulletproof glass window at six uneven wooden poles in front of a sand dune. “There are more of them now,” the British ambassador to Somalia said, driving past the execution posts that convicts are tied to before being shot by firing squad. “It

Sign in to follow Follow this story to get bell alerts when new updates publish.
Follow, alerts and app Choose delivery, pin Nyakundi, or manage this thread.

Follow this story

Sign in once to follow Firing squads, blast walls and dangerous diplomacy in Somalia, pin Nyakundi, and come back to the same story as it develops.

Sign in
  1. 1

    Follow thread

    Create or open your account, then follow this thread from the story header.

  2. 2

    Pick alerts

    Choose every update, major updates, daily recap, documents only, or no notifications.

  3. 3

    Pin app

    Install Nyakundi so push alerts reopen this exact story.

  4. 4

    Share link

    Use the parent story link when you want the whole evolution to travel together.

Pin Nyakundi

Install the site as an app so followed-story alerts open straight back into the file.

Story map

Start here

Understand the file, then jump to the newest update or the part you care about.

1 update in this file Updated May 4

Start here

A navy flak jacket over his sky-blue shirt, Neil Wigan peered through the bulletproof glass window at six uneven wooden poles in front of a sand dune. “There are more of them now,” the...

Read the catch-up

What we know

A navy flak jacket over his sky-blue shirt, Neil Wigan peered through the bulletproof glass window at six uneven wooden poles in front of a sand...

Follow updates

Latest update

Firing squads, blast walls and dangerous diplomacy in Somalia

Jump to latest

Visual file

Latest media in this story

Photos and videos from the update stream, linked back to the exact moment they entered the file.

Where we are so far

If you are joining us

Live updates

Latest developments

Newest updates appear first. Older context continues below.

1 update in this file Jump to latest Back to top
Photo
Update link
Nyakundi Report

Firing squads, blast walls and dangerous diplomacy in Somalia

Media in this update

1 item
MOGADISHU-CENTRAL-HOTEL

MOGADISHU-CENTRAL-HOTEL

Photo

A navy flak jacket over his sky-blue shirt, Neil Wigan peered through the bulletproof glass window at six uneven wooden poles in front of a sand dune. “There are more of them now,” the British ambassador to Somalia said, driving past the execution posts that convicts are tied to before being shot by firing squad. “It isn’t a particularly reassuring sign of progress.” Violence is routine in Somalia, whether perpetrated by suicide bombers, jihadists, assassins, soldiers or the judiciary. Chronic insecurity makes the country a study in diplomacy at its most difficult. Wigan, 44, is Britain’s first resident ambassador to the Horn of Africa country since it collapsed in a hail of gun and rocket fire in 1991. A new embassy opened in April 2013...

Source: nyakundireportblog Linked source