Italy's 1935 attack on Ethiopia led to a
temporary Somali reunification. After Italian
premier Benito Mussolini's armies marched into
Ethiopia and toppled Emperor Haile Selassie, the
Italians seized British Somaliland
During their occupation (1940-41), the
Italians reamalgamated the Ogaden with southern
and northern Somalilands, uniting for the first
time in forty years all the Somali clans that had
been arbitrarily separated by the Anglo-Italo-Ethiopian
boundaries. The elimination of these artificial
boundaries and the unification of the Somali
Peninsula enabled the Italians to set prices and
impose taxes and to issue a common currency for
the entire area. These actions helped move the
Somali economy from traditional exchange in kind
to a monetarized system.
Thousands of Italians, either veterans of the
Ethiopian conquest or new emigrants, poured into
Somalia, especially into the interriverine
region. Although colonization was designed to
entrench the white conquerors, many Somalis did
not fare badly under Italian rule during this
period. Some, such as the Haaji Diiriye and
Yuusuf Igaal families, accumulated considerable
fortunes. One indicator of the Somali sense of
relative wellbeing may have been the absence of
any major anti-Italian revolt during Italy's
occupation.
At the onset of World War II, Italian holdings in
East Africa included southern Somalia, Ethiopia,
and Eritrea. Italy subsequently invaded northern
Somalia and ejected the British from the Horn of
Africa. The Italian victory turned out to be
short-lived, however. In March 1941, the British
counterattacked and reoccupied northern Somalia,
from which they launched their lightning campaign
to retake the whole region from Italy and restore
Emperor Haile Selassie to his throne. The British
then placed southern Somalia and the Ogaden under
a military administration.