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Africa Horn
How al Shabaab recruitment agents lure Kenyans to Somalia
2011-06-07
[Daily Nation (Kenya)] Saumu Chambulu breaks down at the sight of us at her door. She knows why we have come.

As she composes herself, she tells me of the irony of how busy her home has been despite the empty space left by her son Suleiman Hassan.

She knew that she wasn't always able to provide for her children but was thankful for Suleiman because, even in their poverty, he always found comfort in his faith.

But two years ago, Suleiman left his mother's home. He began to be seen in the company of other young men of backgrounds similar to his own in Mworoni on the South Coast.

Then one day he disappeared. After months of searching for her son, Samu said her daughter received a strange phone call indicating he had joined the al Shabaab.

Saumu would quickly learn that this was not only true of her son, but that other young men like him had disappeared across the border, never to return.

No comfort
But the growing number of bereaved parents offers no comfort, especially if among those presumed dead in a country you've heard about only in the news -- in a war you don't understand -- is your own. There is no comfort, only pain.

That was the fate of Suleiman Hassan and other young Kenyans who are recruited to fight for al Shabaab -- the jihadists battling the Transitional Federal Government of Sheikh Sherif Ahmed in Somalia.

And, if a video recording of the recruits is anything to go by, the training is producing dyed-in-the-wool fighters.

"We are coming to slaughter you," they chant in these recordings. The chants are in Kiswahili, perhaps to drive the message home to the Kiswahili-speaking people of eastern Africa.

Not once or twice, but at least four times the region has witnessed firsthand the deadly handiwork of terrorists.

Football fans watching the World Cup final on television in Kampala last year are among the most recent casualties of al Shabaab.

Al Shabaab operates secret bases in Somalia--just across Kenya's eastern border. The group is believed to be an offshoot of the Union of Islamic Courts, a group that nearly seized control from the wobbly regionally backed TFG led at the time by President Abdullahi Yusuf.

To increase its membership, al Shabaab capitalises on two elements: radical Islamic teachings and poverty.

Saumu believes that her son's immersion in his faith may have led him to Somalia. But she also acknowledges that their poverty did nothing to stop him.

Poverty is biting hard not just in Mworoni but all across East Africa, and from what we have found, the frequency at which East Africa's poor are joining the al Shabaab is chilling.

All a prospective recruit needs to know is to whom to talk.
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Africa Horn
Somali soccer fans forced underground
2010-06-10
World Cup madness has come to this troubled nation, creating a dangerous cat-and-mouse game between fans eager to watch televised soccer matches and Islamic militants determined to stop them.

The militia group al Shabaab, which controls most of south and central Somalia, has declared the World Cup un-Islamic and banned watching the games on television. By al Shabaab's logic, the World Cup interferes with the militant group's "jihad," to overthrow the government, because young Somalis are too busy watching the games to fight on their behalf. While the group hasn't yet laid out specific consequences for those defying the ban, the militants have been known to behead or amputate limbs of people who oppose them.

Undeterred Somali soccer fans, whose national team failed to qualify for the tournament, are going underground in search of ways to watch the world's largest televised sporting event, which opens Friday in South Africa.

In recent days, wealthier Somalis in both government-controlled and and al Shabaab run areas have been lining up at electronics shops to buy satellite dishes to watch at home. Local technicians will—for a fee—patch together dishes and wires to rig televisions to show the games. "I don't like my children watching TV—but I don't want to miss watching the World Cup," said Abdullahi Sheikh, a 49-year-old Mogadishu resident who was in line to buy a television and a dish at a shop in town. "It's an amazing event to watch!"

Al Shabaab controls much of Somalia by force. But the militant group's ad-hoc prohibitions have alienated most Somalis. At various times, and in various places around the country, the militants have banned mustaches, dancing and celebrating religious holidays. For followers of the World Cup, the most dangerous ban is the one on soccer. In 2006, the militant group, which was then the armed wing of the government, the Union of Islamic Courts, launched a violent campaign against Somali fans.

These days, the only public place to watch games safely is at the Dhamuke Cinema, part of a small patch of government-controlled territory in the capital Mogadishu. Dhamuke remains one of the few cinemas al Shabaab hasn't destroyed or shut down. The cinema hosts hundreds of teenagers from around the city to watch movies and soccer matches via satellite.

Dhamuke, which is open every day from 10 a.m. to midnight, is almost always full of young people eager to escape the social strictures imposed in other parts of Somalia. Boys and girls are allowed to sit together—a taboo in al Shabaab-controlled areas. Older soccer addicts also occupy the folding metal chairs. On nights when soccer isn't on, the audience watches whatever else is on hand—American movies, Bollywood flicks and films in Swahili and Somali. When one finishes, another reel starts rolling. Price of admission is 2,000 Somali shillings, or a few pennies.

Outside of the government-run area, the cinemas will be dark because showing the games is too dangerous. Over the past few years, militants have hurled grenades into cinemas in several towns, killing and injuring people. In a Mogadishu café on a recent afternoon, young men huddled to discuss their plans for watching the game. "If we have no jobs and can't watch or play football it's heartbreaking—and unacceptable," said Said Haji, a 22-year-old Somali sipping coffee. Mr. Haji lives in the government-controlled area, and will be able to go to the cinema. "Some of my friends don't have that chance," he says.

Some young men say militants have deprived them of one of their only means of entertainment. "We can't play football, we have no cinemas to watch the World Cup and we don't have jobs," said Mohamed Nur, a 24-year-old World Cup fan. "We wake up, and go to sleep, alone." But not all Somali soccer fans have been dissuaded. People who can't find a cinema are likely to tune into local radio stations that broadcast soccer matches, which haven't yet been banned by al Shabaab. They can also look up scores in Internet cafés. And at informal gatherings, men of every age will debate the merits of their favorite teams late into the night—and as it happens in so many places, sometimes come to blows.
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Africa Horn
Iran ready to help establish peace in Somalia
2010-02-02
[Iran Press TV Latest] Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki says the Islamic Republic is ready to help efforts to establish peace in Somalia.

Mottaki made the remarks in a meeting with Somali President Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed on the sidelines of an African Union meeting in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia on Monday.

The Iranian foreign minister also said Tehran is ready to send humanitarian assistance to the war-torn country.

He advised the Somali leader to enter into talks with opposition groups in order to bring peace to the country.

The opposition fighters have recently stepped up attacks against Somalia's UN-backed transitional government and African Union peacekeepers with the aim of toppling the embattled government.

The main armed opposition group in Somalia, Al-Shabab, is a military off-shoot of the Union of Islamic Courts.

They have been fighting Somali government troops and African Union peacekeepers in and around Mogadishu.

The Union of Islamic Courts came to power in southern Somalia in June 2006 after defeating Somali warlords. However, the UIC was forced out of power in December 2006 through an Ethiopian invasion aided by the United States.

Sheikh Ahmed also thanked Iran for its support of Somalia and said he would like to visit Iran in the near future.
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Africa Horn
Somalia: Al-Shabab's Pyrrhic Victory?
2009-05-21
Nairobi — Somalia's Al-Shabab militia have recently captured several strategic towns near Mogadishu, but the group has yet to gain popularity among locals, observers said.

The onslaught has sent thousands of displaced civilians on the run again and crippled aid operations in the southern regions. The UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) estimates that 40,000 people have been displaced since fighting intensified on 7 May. Other aid workers say at least 150 people have been killed and more than 400 injured.

"The capture of Jowhar goes to the heart of the problem in Somalia and demonstrates that indeed the government in Mogadishu is by and large extremely weak," Timothy Othieno, an analyst at the London-based Overseas Development Institute, told IRIN. "The government needs to engage with the people who matter, including hardliners, who include Al-Shabab."

Al-Shabab has continued to expand its control of southern and central Somalia and captured Jowhar, 90km north of Mogadishu, on 17 May.

According to a political observer in the capital, however, the capture of Jowhar may be a sign that Al-Shabab has peaked. "In my opinion this is as far they will reach," he said. "They have entered hostile territory, where they are less popular than even the Ethiopians [troops] were." The Ethiopian soldiers were invited by the Transitional Federal Government in December 2006 to help oust the Union of Islamic Courts (UIC).

Pointing to the recent defection of prominent opposition figure Sheikh Yusuf "Indha Cadde" to the government side, which he described as a boost, the observer said Mogadishu's apparent weakness "may in fact work to the benefit of the government by galvanising supporters to take the offensive".

Separately, a regional analyst, who requested anonymity, said: "The fall of Jowhar is less a sign of Al-Shabab's strength than the government's apparent disarray and paralysis. Either the opposition will maintain the initiative, fatally eroding the government's authority and cohesion; or the crisis will provoke a determined and unified reaction from the government."

The current fighting has had a devastating impact on the population and the fall of Jowhar will make it even more difficult to access those needing assistance, aid workers said. "For those who depend on them [aid workers] it means no help for now," one Somali civil society leader said.
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Africa Horn
New violence aggravates disaster in Somalia
2009-05-15
A fresh wave of fighting between feuding sides has left more than thirty people dead in Somalia's Hiiran region and the northern part of the capital Mogadishu.

Forces loyal to the Union of Islamic Courts (UIC) clashed with al-Shabaab fighters on Thursday when the anti-government gunmen moved to take control of Beledweyne town in the Hiiran region, Press TV has learned. The heavy exchanges of gunfire between the two sides left at least a dozen people killed and more than 30 injured.

Meanwhile, the sound of repeated mortar fire and exploding shells has persuaded hundreds of people in the area to leave their homes in search of a safe zone. UIC officials claim they have killed more than 51 al-Shabaab fighters and injured some 40 others, but the figure cannot be independently confirmed.

Elsewhere, some 40 soldiers and gunmen died when heavy fighting broke out between al-Shabaab fighters and government troops between the Sanca and Afarta Darjino districts in the north of Mogadishu. The hours-long fighting also left 80 civilians wounded and the ensuing exchanges of mortar fire caused serious damage to residential areas near the conflict zone. Schools and businesses remain closed in northern Mogadishu, where eight days of bloody conflict between armed rebels and soldiers loyal to President Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed have claimed more than 230 lives.

The clashes come as part of a push by the transitional government in Somalia to take control of a number of streets and buildings in Mogadishu. Local fighters in capital have been deployed around the presidential office with their leader, Sheikh Hassan Dahir Aweys, calling on the president to step down.

Since assuming control of the country's affairs, the president has embraced diplomacy and believes he can bring fighting factions together and establish calm.
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Africa Horn
ŽEritrea smuggling arms into SomaliaŽ
2009-05-05
[Iran Press TV Latest] Somalia accuses neighboring Eritrea of fueling the country's already unbridled violence by arming the Somali fighters despite an international arms embargo.

On Monday, Somalia's Security Minister, Omar Hashi Aden said two arms-laden aircraft had successively touched down in the southern region of Lower Shabelle having departed from Eritrea.

Eritrea used to house the leadership of the Somali opposition faction, the Union of Islamic Courts (UIC) while the group and its fighters, Al-Shabaab were in intense confrontation with the former transitional authorities.

However, the Transitional Federal Government (TFG) was succeeded by a Unity Government headed by Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed, and the UIC promised cooperation with the new administration.

Eritrea's Information Minister, Ali Abdu, for his part refuted the claims saying he would not comment on the matter as his country did not recognize the incumbent Somali administration.
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Britain
Somali radicals 'importing terror to UK'
2009-02-16
Dozens of Islamic extremists have returned to Britain from terror training camps in Somalia, the British security services believe. Intelligence analysts are worried that they may attempt to launch attacks in this country or use the kudos from having trained and fought in Somalia to try to attract new recruits. The issue was raised by Jonathan Evans, the head of MI5, in his first interview last month. In the US, the outgoing head of the CIA, Michael Hayden, has said that Ethiopia's invasion of Somalia in late 2006 “catalysed” expatriate Somalis around the world.

An investigation for Channel 4 News, to be broadcast tonight, also reveals that a suicide bomber who grew up in Ealing is thought to have blown himself up in an attack in Somalia that killed more than 20 soldiers. The incident is the first reported case involving a Somali based in Britain and will add to pressure on Scotland Yard and the Home Office to tackle the problem within the Somali community, which, at about 250,000 people, is the biggest in Europe. “Pakistan rightly gets the most attention in terms of external threats,” a senior counter-terrorism source said. “But we believe we should focus more on the Horn of Africa and Somalia in particular.”

Two years ago Ethiopian forces occupied parts of Somalia after ousting the Union of Islamic Courts (UIC) from the capital, Mogadishu – the latest chapter in a long history of conflict between the two countries. The Ethiopians withdrew last month as part of a peace deal agreed between the Government and moderate Islamists, leaving African Union peacekeepers and Somali soldiers – although many believe that they will not be able to keep advancing extremists at bay. The hardline Islamist militia al-Shabaab, treated as a terrorist organisation by the US, has taken advantage of Ethiopia's withdrawal to boost its control of the south. More than 16,000 people have been reported killed in the past two years of fighting.

Peter Neumann, a terrorism expert who runs the Centre for the Study of Radicalisation at King's College London, told Channel 4 News: “The numbers I hear [going from Britain to Somalia] are 50, 60 or 70, but in reality we don't know. You don't need big numbers for terrorism. Somalia will never become another Pakistan, but that does not mean it is not a threat.”

Most Somalis in Britain entered the country as asylum-seekers within the past 20 years. They include Yasin Omar and Ramzi Mohammed, two of the four men convicted of the botched bombing of the London Underground on July 21, 2005. An audio message from Osama bin Laden last month urged Muslims to send money or go to fight themselves in Somalia. “Such references are usually a good indicator,” Dr Neumann said. “The place is seen as an opportunity, from a jihadist point of view.”

Some Somali leaders say their community – already associated with gang and knife crime – is being unfairly targeted. But outside a West London mosque last week, several Somalis were adamant that they were entitled to fight for their homeland. “If American troops can go from Arizona to Iraq then someone can leave this area and go to Somalia,” one said.

The British Somali who became a suicide bomber had abandoned a business studies course at Oxford Brookes University (Jonathan Rugman writes). The 21-year-old from Ealing, West London, reportedly blew himself up at a checkpoint in the southern Somali town of Baidoa in October 2007 after crossing into Somalia by foot from Kenya. News reports at the time said that the Somali Prime Minister was staying at a nearby hotel but escaped. Somali jihadist websites claimed that more than 20 Ethiopian soldiers were killed. The bomber was a member of al-Shabaab – The Youth – militia, which is fighting to impose Islamic law. Its brutal tactics include decapitating alleged spies with knives. Six aid workers were reportedly killed by the group last December. It is not clear whether Britain's security services are aware of the Ealing student's case. His family, who still live in London, want his name withheld to avoid reprisals.

The man had recorded a martyrdom video in which he urged Somalia's refugee diaspora to join him in his jihad. “Oh my people, know that I am doing this martyrdom operation for the sake of Allah,” he said. “I advise you to migrate to Somalia and wage war against your enemies. Death in honour is better than life in humiliation.”

Sheikh Ahmed Aabi, a moderate Somali religious leader in Kentish Town, northwest London, said that he knew of the Ealing case and had heard from other families of sons travelling to Somalia to join warring Islamist groups. “I'm hearing it from parents,” he said. “They say they [their children] are joining the jihad. I am hearing there are a lot of people. This is a big problem facing our community.”
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Africa Horn
Somalia orders recapture of Baidoa
2009-02-03
Somali government has reportedly ordered military to take back the transitional administration's final stronghold from opposition fighters.

The country's soldiers started advancing towards the central town of Baidoa on Monday, after the government officials held talks in the southern town of Huduur to discuss the details of the move, a Press TV correspondent reported. The town, which is the seat of the Somali parliament, recently fell into the clutches of Al-Shabaab fighters.

The gunmen have been opposing the country's Transitional Federal Government (TFG) on behalf of their superiors -- the Union of Islamic Courts. Following the fall of Baidoa Somali lawmakers, gathered in neighboring Djibouti in an attempt to shape a unity government in the Horn of Africa country under a UN-brokered plan.

Earlier in the day, the UIC voiced its opposition to the lawmakers' Saturday election of popular opposition leader Sheik Sharif Sheik Ahmed as the country's new president. The fighters "see the result of the conference of conspiracy in Djibouti as one that does not concern us and we do not recognize it," said Sheik Muse Abdi Arale, a top UIC official, Xinhua reported.
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Africa Horn
Insurgents in Somalia Take Over Police Posts
2009-01-04
MOGADISHU, Somalia — Ethiopian troops moved out of a border town on Saturday, a day after soldiers began a pullout from the war-ravaged capital of Mogadishu.

It remains unclear whether the Ethiopian troops who have been shoring up the country’s weak transitional government will leave the country, or whether some will redeploy in other parts of Somalia. Western diplomats have estimated that Ethiopia has had thousands of troops in the country.

The town that the soldiers left on Saturday, Balanbale, is in a region where Islamist militias have been fighting one another. Many here worry that an Ethiopian pullout will leave a power vacuum that Islamist factions will battle one another to fill. Those fears were exacerbated on Friday when an Islamist group took over three empty police stations here.

That faction, the Union of Islamic Courts, signed a cease-fire with the government in 2006 and is not allied with the Shabab, one of Somalia’s most militant Islamic groups. The Shabab controls much of southern Somalia.

Sheik Abdirahim Isse Addow, the spokesman for the faction, said his group had decided to move into the police stations to “ensure the security of the people.” He added, “This is not a challenge against other Islamists.”
No, no, course not, heaven forfend ...
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Africa Horn
Somali MPs absent parliament
2008-12-20
Nearly half of Somali lawmakers reportedly refused to turn up in the parliament after alleged death threats targeting the president's allies.

The no-show was triggered by a Thursday break-in into the parliament's building by unidentified soldiers and gunmen, Aljazeera TV reported on its website. The forced entry had been made to gag opposition to the parliament spokesman Sheikh Adan Mohamed Nur (Modobe)'s verdict on divisive issues, the source added.

The country's President Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed sparked considerable opposition after he 'unconstitutionally' replaced Premier Nur Hassan Hussein with his own appointee Mohamud Mohamed Guled.

There is currently a gaping gulf between the parliamentarians who have rallied around the president's choice and those advocating the reinstatement of Nur Hassan Hussain; the most outstanding among them being the spokesman and a former leader of armed opposition Mohamed Nur.

On Thursday night the house of Hussein-allied MP Khadija Mohammed Diriye, who was recently appointed as a cabinet minister was raided by gunmen reported to be government soldiers, the Press TV correspondent in Somalia reported.

The recent developments have turned the southern town of Baidoa the seat of the parliament into a flashpoint.

The dismissed premier has staunchly called for the ouster of President Yusuf. 140 lawmakers joined his camp leaving out only 40 others to bring the decision into effect.

Hassan Hussein is currently in Djibouti on reconciliation efforts to meet with Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed the leader of the more cociliatory faction of the Somali opposition the Alliance for the Re-liberation of Somalia (ARS).

The political standoff has been exacerbated by steadfast resistance on the part of opposition camps including the Union of Islamic Courts (UIC) and its militiamen Al-Shabaab.
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Africa Horn
Al-Shabaab set up regional administration
2008-12-07
Somali opposition fighters, Al-Shabaab set up a regional administration in a southern region increasing their footholds in the country.

Al-Shabaab appointed a regional governor to the Lower Shabelle region marking off their expanding territory from the areas held by the transitional government, the Press TV correspondent in Somalia reported.

The group's spokesman Sheikh Mukhtar Robow reportedly said Sheikh Abdulrahman Siiro was inaugurated as the governor during a ceremony held in the regional capital Merka. The fighters had seized the capital from the government troops last month.

Siiro's inferiors such as the head of the Supreme Court and the region's security chief were also named.

The fighters have captured most parts of the country thanks to the Transitional Federal Government (TFG)'s declining power. They have been struggling for power since 2006 when their leadership, the Union of Islamic Courts (UIC), were removed on the back of an Ethiopian intervention.
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Africa Horn
Somali infighting leaves 13 dead
2008-12-06
Thirteen gunmen died in armed clashes between Somali opposition fighters and another armed group Ahl-ul-Sunna wal- Jamaa in central Somalia. The fighting broke out in the town of Guri-El in the Galgaduud region after the Ahl-ul Sunna gunmen attacked Al-Shabaab fighters, the Press TV correspondent in Mogadishu reported.
"Hrarrrr! We're holy'r'n youse are!"
"Ain't, neither!"
"Are, too!"
"Go fer yer guns, yew varmint!"

The spokesman for the influential Hawiye clan, Ahmed Dirie Ali, condemned the bloodshed.
"Tut tut. And tut."
All the fighters are affiliated with the Somali Union of Islamic Courts (UIC) and oppose the leadership of the transitional federal government, accusing its leadership of excessive reliance on foreign support.
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