In 1728 the last Portuguese foothold on the
East African coast was dislodged from the great
Mombasa castle of Fort Jesus. From then until the
European "scramble" for African colonies in the
1880s, the Omanis exercised a shadowy authority
over the Banaadir coast.
Omani rule over the Somalis consisted for the
most part of a token annual tribute payment and
the presence of a resident qadi (Muslim judge)
and a handful of askaris (territorial police).
Whereas the Banaadir coast was steadily drawn
into the orbit of Zanzibari rulers, the northern
coast, starting in the middle of the eighteenth
century, passed under the sharifs of Mukha, who
held their feeble authority on behalf of the
declining Ottomans. The Mukha sharifs, much like
the sultans of Zanzibar, satisfied themselves
with a token yearly tribute collected for them by
a native governor. In 1854-55 when Lieutenant
Richard Burton of the British India navy
frequented the northern Somali coast, he found a
Somali governor, Haaji Shermaarke Ali Saalih of
the Habar Yoonis clan of the Isaaq clan-family,
exercising real power over Saylac and adjacent
regions. By the time of Burton's arrival,
once-mighty Saylac had only a tenuous influence
over its environs. The city itself had
degenerated into a rubble of mud and wattle huts,
its water storage no longer working, its once
formidable walls decayed beyond recognition, and
its citizenry insulted and oppressed at will by
tribesmen who periodically infested the city.