Before most of the city stirs, two highly trained canines are already preparing for work that could mean the difference between life and death. Thelma, a five-year-old cinnamon Cocker Spaniel, and Gordon, a four-year-old black Labrador, form part of UNMAS’s Explosive Detection Dog unit, operating in one of the world’s most dangerous security environments where the threat of terrorism is constant.
These unsung heroes arrived from the United Kingdom in 2023, dog passports in hand, to protect people, infrastructure, and peace operations from hidden explosives. In Somalia’s capital, their highly sensitive noses serve as frontline defense, their presence providing security, and their partnership with their handler demonstrating how trust and teamwork confront extraordinary danger.
The Handler’s Bond: Foundation of Success
Every effective detection dog relies on a handler who knows them intimately. Sam, who has worked in Somalia since 2019 and trained four dogs during his tenure, views his role as more than employment—it’s a calling.
“My dogs are my friends,” Sam explains. “We work as a team. I trust my dogs, and they trust me.”
This trust manifests in every interaction. Thelma and Gordon monitor Sam constantly, responding to subtle hand signals and body language. This relationship, cultivated through daily work, play, and care, forms the foundation of their effectiveness. Without it, performance suffers. With it, they thrive.
Dawn Ritual: Health Checks Before Deployment
The kennel awakens at 5:00 a.m. Sam greets Thelma and Gordon as another mission day begins. In explosive detection work, precision starts with meticulous care, which is why the morning routine never varies.
Sam performs comprehensive health examinations each morning, checking paws, ears, eyes, gums, and coat. Grooming serves dual purposes: maintaining cleanliness and conducting vital health assessments. Any indication of injury or exhaustion triggers immediate reporting, and dogs showing signs of distress are pulled from duty. Only dogs in optimal condition proceed to work.
After clearance, Thelma and Gordon are leashed and brought to a break area before being secured in a vehicle equipped with proper kennels. Following a weekly operational schedule, destinations vary: training facilities or active duty assignments at Mogadishu checkpoints, vehicle inspection points, luggage screening stations, building searches, or open area sweeps. Regardless of location, their objective remains constant: detect explosives through passive indication before harm occurs.
Training Protocol: Honing Life-Saving Abilities
UNMAS maintains rigorous standards, requiring explosive detection dogs to complete three to six months of intensive training after arriving semi-trained, typically between 18 months and two years old.
Training sessions replicate operational conditions. Dogs learn to search vehicles, luggage, buildings, and open spaces using scent detection. Before each search, Sam assesses wind direction—a standard starting procedure and critical factor guiding Thelma and Gordon’s finely tuned noses. Detection follows a passive protocol: when explosives are identified, the dog sits. No scratching, barking, or contact with the threat occurs. When nothing is detected, there’s no indication.
During training, rewards take the form of toys. In actual operations, there are no rewards—only immediate withdrawal and strict security protocols. Certified UNMAS trainers supervise these sessions, ensuring every dog and handler meets rigorous UN standards.
Active Duty: Where Training Meets Reality
The afternoon shift begins at 2:00 p.m., transitioning from training to operational work. Risk becomes tangible, and threats persist. Sam arrives wearing a ballistic vest and helmet—clear indicators this is no longer practice. The dogs proceed without protective gear, relying entirely on their trained abilities to safeguard others.
At today’s site focused on vehicle searches, cars and trucks arrive sequentially. Each vehicle represents uncertainty. Unlike training scenarios, no guarantees exist that danger is absent. Explosives could be concealed in any vehicle. Tension runs high, danger is substantial. This is when detection dogs prove not merely useful, but essential to preserving lives.
Thelma and Gordon work systematically, noses lowered, scanning each vehicle within the secured zone. They examine and evaluate what no technology or human observation can detect. Not even their handlers know what awaits. In these moments, experience, discipline, trust, and the profound bond between dog and handler stand between safety and disaster.
These operations carry intensity. This distinguishes training from reality. Here, when a dog sits, it’s not practice—it’s an alert. It may signal imminent explosion and lives in jeopardy. In this hostile environment, Thelma and Gordon function as more than detectors. They serve as protectors, safeguarding civilians, local communities, humanitarian workers, peacekeepers, and international personnel. Their work transcends routine tasks—it constitutes frontline defense. Without them, risk would escalate exponentially.
Evening Wind-Down: Rest and Recovery
At 8:00 p.m., following a demanding shift, Thelma and Gordon return to the kennel for rest. The routine includes time in the break area followed by downtime. Evenings center on bonding—playtime, socialization with other dogs, and companionship with Sam. Time with their handler serves as its own reward.
Dinner consists of fresh water and high-protein food. After eating, the dogs settle in for the night, unaware of the lives they’ve protected, threats they’ve neutralized, or paths they’ve secured. Tomorrow, the cycle repeats.
Through dedicated service, explosive detection dogs provide a critical security layer in high-risk environments. These animals demonstrate that courage doesn’t always announce itself—sometimes it quietly sniffs, calmly sits, and silently saves lives. In Mogadishu, they’re not simply part of the mission—they make the mission possible.
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