Shilavo

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Shilabo
Shilabo is located in Ethiopia
Shilabo
Shilabo
Location within Ethiopia
Coordinates: 6°6′N 44°46′E / 6.100°N 44.767°E / 6.100; 44.767
Country Ethiopia
RegionSomali
ZoneKorahe
Elevation
395 m (1,296 ft)
Time zoneUTC+3 (EAT)

Shilabo (Somali: Shilaabo; also spelled "Scilave", "Shelabo") is a town in eastern Ethiopia, in the Korahe Zone of the Somali Region. It is the administrative center of Shilabo woreda.

History[edit]

During the 1963 Ogaden rebellion, Shilaabo was blockaded and shelled by the Ethiopian Imperial Army as a reprisal for local support to the insurgency.[1]

Somali military units supported the Western Somali Liberation Front's attack on an Ethiopian military unit outside Silavo in June 1982, which led to a renewal of hostilities between the two countries.[2]

The former President of neighbouring Somalia, Maj. General Mohamed Siyad Barre, was born in Shilaabo, although he later claimed he was born in Garbahaarreey so he would be eligible to serve in the Italian colonial police force.[3][4]

The mayor of Shilabo, Mahdi Badal Omar was arrested in July 1995, for allegedly being a member of the Ogaden National Liberation Front.[2]

Demographics[edit]

Based on 2005 figures from the Central Statistical Agency, Shilavo has an estimated total population of 7,239 of whom 3,877 are men and 3,362 are women.[5] The 1997 census reported this town had a total population of 4,853 of whom 2,561 were men and 2,383 women. The largest ethnic group reported in this town was the Somali (98.95%)1994 Population and Housing Census of Ethiopia: Results for Somali Region, Vol. 1 Tables 2.4, 2.13 (accessed 10 January 2009). The results of the 1994 census in the Somali Region were not satisfactory, so the census was repeated in 1997.

The city is primarily inhabited by the Bahgeri subclan of Ogaden , Marehan sub clan of Daarod, the Ogaden subclan of Daarod and a small community of the Hawadle subclan of Hawiye But the majority clan is Bahgeri

One of the famous people from Shilavo are Dalmar AWil Gorod , Mahdi Badal Omar and Ugas Farah Sahal

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Politics and Violence in Eastern Africa: The Struggles of Emerging States. Taylor & Francis. 2017. pp. 191–192. ISBN 9781317539520.
  2. ^ a b "Local History in Ethiopia" Archived 2011-05-28 at the Wayback Machine (pdf) The Nordic Africa Institute website (accessed 2 December 2007)
  3. ^ David D. Laitin and Said S. Samatar, Somalia: Nation in Search of a State (Boulder: Westview Press 1987), p. 79
  4. ^ Ethiopia Somalia Clashes 1982 (accessed 20 July 2009)
  5. ^ CSA 2005 National Statistics, Table B.4