Dervish State Dhulbahante garesa In the Dervish-written letter's description of the fall of Taleh in February 1920, in an April 1920 letter transcribed from the original Arabic script into Italian by the incumbent
Governatori della Somaliland, the various Dervish-built installations are described as
garesas taken from the Dhulbahante clan by the British: {{Verse translation The Mogadishu governor was later inspired to similarly refer to his resident mansion as a
garesa.
Choice as capital fort were
Haji Yusuf Barre, the singlehanded defender of Taleh,
Mohamud Hosh (pictured), the last castellan of Taleh and
Jama Biixi Kidin, an abandoned Dervish child prisoner. According to Dervish veteran Ciise Faarax Fikad, Taleh was chosen as the Dervish capital because the
Nugaal Valley lies at the heartland of Dhulbahante territory, its distance from colonial administrative centers and to generate geographical distance from the hostile bodies such as
Rayid signatories to British treaties, the
Majeerteen, those under
Mohamoud Ali Shire and the Ogaden who were in general opposed to the Dervish: {{Verse translation Colonial sources concur with Somali sources that non-Dhulbahante clans were hostile towards the Dervish:
Dervish forts/Dhulbahante garesas , consisted of the
Ciid-Nugaal regions of
Nugaal province,
Las Anod District,
Xudun District,
Taleh District,
Boocame District and
Bookh District. Taleh is home to several historic structures dating to the Dervish era. Of these, there are five forts erected by
Mohammed Abdullah Hassan's former Dervish movement in present-day
Sool and
Sanaag. Constructed between 1901 and 1915, most of the edifices are concentrated in the Sanaag & Sool region, including
Dalyare fort,
Jidali fort, Midhisho, Shimbir Bariis and Badhan. Taleh/Taleex is the largest of the structures. According to Cabdi-Yaar Cali Guuleed, a Dervish veteran, the largest Dhulbahante fort from the Dervish era is the Dhulbahante fort of Taleh which according to him was built between 1909 and 1910 and he said the following: {{Verse translation It was built around a collection of Dervish tombs, the earliest of which belongs to Sultan
Nur Ahmed Aman and Carro Seed Magan, the mother of the emir of
Diiriye Guure, i.e. the Sayid. From 1909 to 1910, the Dervish constructed the main fort around the older tombs. They spent the next two years in the mountainous regions of Sanaag building three more smaller forts. Maxamuud Xoosh Cigaal was the last Dervish man to be resident at the Taleh fort, whilst the six-year old Jaamac Biixi Kidin was the last Dervish person in the fort overall. A 1931 diary-book by former governor of Italian Somaliland Francesco Caroselli notes an April 1920 letter by the Sayid to the then Italian-Somalia governor which states the Taleh fort was one of 27 forts built by Dervish and that they're called
Dhulbahante garesas. {{Verse translation
Fall of Taleh File:Plan of Taleh Fort.png|thumb|left|300px|'The Mullah's fortifications at Taleh'. The tombs of Mohammed Abdullah Hassan[ empty ], Sultan Nur and Haji Osman Abdallah head of Kob Fardod Rashiidiya-Ahmediya tariqa and brother in-law of Sheikh Abdullahi Hassan senior . The 2 Hawiye Mullaha's unnamed along Haji Osman were the head mullahs and founders of Kob Fardod late 1860s. In 1919–1920, the British
Royal Air Force (RAF) bombarded the Sanaag forts, where most of the Dervish had operated since 1913. Having destroyed the structures and driven out
Mohammed Abdullah Hassan's men to Taleh in 1920, they finally attacked the town, assisted by horsemen and Somali personalities. The settlement was bombarded by the Royal Air Force on 4 February and taken days later, with the British having defeated the last pockets of Dervish resistance. Among the casualties at Taleh were
commander ismail mire and
Artan Boos, two of the closest men to the Mullah and both being of the
Dhulbaahante sub-division of the
Harti. The former was the commander of the Dervish at Taleh, and the latter was a long-standing member of the movement according to Douglas Jardin (1923) and Henry Rayne (1921). Another Dervish leader, Muuse dheere, was captured alive and later executed by former Dervish Abdi Dhere, who had defected to the opposition in 1919. Muhammad Abdullah Hassan himself managed to escape to the
Ogaden, where his Dervishes were later routed in a 1921 raid led by the clan leader Khadar Taagane.
After the Somali civil war At the beginning of the Somali civil war, the Sool region was in a drought, and the area around Taleh was particularly affected. Local nomads lost much of their assets and migrated to nearby cities such as Las Anod. In 2009, women reportedly have no voting or suffrage rights in Taleh at this time. In March 2011, elders of Taleh resolved to call for the withdrawal of Somaliland troops from Sool. On December 26, 2011, an SSC meeting was held in Taleh, attended by elder Haji Abdikarim Hussein and others. In August 2011, fighting between Somaliland and Puntland forces occurred in Taleh, with at least 3 killed and 7 wounded. In January 2012, Somaliland police arrested a reporter from Universal TV in
Las Anod who broadcast news about the Taleh clan meeting for allegedly distorting the content of the meeting.
Conflict between Somaliland and Khatumo In January 2012, the Dhulbahante clan proclaimed the independence of
Khatumo State with Taleh as its capital. However, this was not recognized internationally, nor by neighboring states Somaliland and Puntland. In November 2012,
Somaliland municipal elections were held, but voting did not take place in Taleh for security reasons. In November 2013, there were clashes between Puntland and Khatumo forces, which also killed several civilians. Many of Taleh's residents were evacuated to nearby neighborhoods. Epidemics of diarrhea, pneumonia, and other diseases occurred in evacuated areas. In mid-April 2014, Somaliland sent hundreds of troops to occupy Taleh, the main town in Khatumo. The Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General for Somali Affairs,
Nicholas Kay, expressed concern about the conflict between Somaliland and Puntland and urged mediation by the
United Nations Assistance Mission in Somalia (UNSOM). Somaliland troops withdrew one day after occupation. In June 2014, Somaliland also temporarily occupied Taleh. In December 2015, the Somaliland government granted a foreign company a permit to conduct oil exploration in the Sool region, and when that company conducted oil exploration in Taleh and
Hudun, Puntland condemned this as a provocation by Somaliland. In May 2016, Puntland's Minister of Insurance visited Taleh to lay the cornerstone for the birth center. In December 2016, the region was in drought and a delegation, including Somaliland's Interior Minister, has visited several towns in the Sool region, including Taleh, to survey the drought situation. In 2017, the Puntland President
Abdiweli Gaas appointed Mohamed Roble Isse as Taleh District Commissioner. The
2017 Somaliland presidential election saw Taleh become a constituency for the first time. In June 2018, a SOMNEWS TV reporter was arrested by Somaliland police for reporting on a press conference held by elders in the Taleh district. In April 2019, Somaliland forces and pro-Somaliland militias took control of the Taleh district. Khatumo forces withdrew without fighting. In April 2019, diarrhea symptoms caused by
water shortage occurred in Taleh. Taleh has no hospital and is coping with traditional home remedies, with some patients being taken to
Las Anod, which is dominated by Somaliland, and others to
Garoowe, the capital of Puntland.
Policies by Somaliland In December 2019, Somaliland's Minister of Information visited Taleh. In January 2023, the Khaatumo government begins voter registration for
municipal elections and
parliamentary election in Sool region, including Taleh. One polling station was set up in the Taleh area, and the distribution of ballots was scheduled for three days until March 15, but a one-week postponement was announced. In June, preliminary results from the regional parliaments were announced and Jamaahirta 6, Qalas 3, Maqawir 0 are selected in Taleh. ==Silsilad==