Somalia’s political and military establishment is marking the death of Haji Ali Abdille Fiixiye, better known as Colonel Ali Shoocaac, as the loss of a figure whose career spanned some of the country’s most consequential decades.
President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud led the tributes after the retired officer died in Kenya, offering condolences to his family, the Somali Armed Forces and the wider public. The presidency described Shoocaac as a veteran whose service reached beyond the barracks and into the broader project of national unity and public institution-building.
The statement was short on personal details. Officials did not disclose the cause of death or announce funeral arrangements. But the political message was clear: Shoocaac belonged to a generation of officers whose careers were intertwined with the rise, collapse and attempted reconstruction of the Somali state.
That history gives the mourning a contemporary edge. Somalia is trying to build a professional national army while fighting Al-Shabaab and reducing its dependence on foreign security support. Honoring older commanders allows the government to draw a line between past service and the institutions it wants to create now.
Condolences from officials, serving officers and members of the public continued after the announcement. For the presidency, the moment is both personal and institutional — a farewell to a veteran, and a reminder that Somalia’s current security forces are being rebuilt on the legacy of people who served through years of upheaval.
