The harrowing testimony of a former child soldier from Somalia, now seeking refuge in the UK, is not merely a personal tragedy. It is a damning indictment of our collective moral paralysis. As the boy recounts his forced conscription into Al-Shabaab, the grim spectre of the Victorian ‘white man’s burden’ returns, but inverted: we, the enlightened West, have abandoned our post.
The UK, with its historical ties to East Africa and its current position as a global advocate for human rights, has dithered while Somalia rots. This is not about charity; it is about duty. Our withdrawal from active intervention—the legacy of Iraq and Afghanistan fatigue—has left a vacuum for terror to flourish.
The ex-child soldier’s nightmare is a mirror reflecting our own decadence. We fret over cultural battles while children are turned into killers. The Romans, in their decline, faced the Barbarians at the gate.
We face Al-Shabaab in our own backyard. The moral calculus is simple: either we act decisively, with military and diplomatic might, to dismantle the terror infrastructure, or we accept the slow creep of our own irrelevance. The boy’s story is a call to arms, not for empire, but for conscience.
Shall we answer, or shall we stew in our intellectual complacency?









