Africa Horn |
Kenya Puts Bounty In Hunt For Suspected Al Shabaab Members |
2017-10-09 |
[RADIOSHABELLE] The Government has in the last two years placed over Sh100 million bounty on heads of about 35 wanted terror suspects. The money is for reward on information leading to arrest of most wanted Al-Shabaab ... ![]() militia. While some suspects have either been placed in durance vile Please don't kill me! or killed by security agents in Kenya and neighbouring Somalia, many still remain in hiding. A security bigshot privy to the Anti-terrorism operations told Sunday Standard that the bounties have had a great impact in tracking some terrorists. Mohammed Mohamud alias Mohammed Kuno, a Kenyan al-Shabaab leader is said to have led the heinous Garissa University College massacre in which 147 people were killed in April 2015. He holds the highest bounty at Sh20 million. The suspect, also known as Dulyadin Gamadhere, hails from the Ogaden tribe in Garissa County. He has been linked to several terror attacks in the country, including the September 2013 Westgate Shopping Mall raid in which 67 people were killed. |
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Kenya says university massacre mastermind killed in US drone strike in Somalia | |
2015-07-17 | |
[AlAhram] A US drone strike in Somalia has killed four senior members of the Al-Qaeda-affiliated Shabaab, including the alleged criminal mastermind of the Garissa University massacre in Kenya in April, a Kenyan interior ministry front man said Thursday. The strike, which took place in the early hours of Thursday, claimed the life of Mohammed Mohamud -- also known by the aliases of Dulyadin, Kuno and Gamadhere -- who was on Kenya's wanted list after the massacre, front man Mwenda Njoka said. "It was a US drone. Kenyan forces usually provide ground support, information and intelligence on such strikes," he told AFP. In April, four Shabaab Lions of Islam massacred 148 people at the Garissa University in Kenya's northeast, in what was the group's deadliest single attack to date. Most of the victims were students. The United States has in recent years launched numerous drone strikes against Shabaab leaders, including a strike last September that killed the group's leader Ahmed Abdi Godane. Thursday's attack came just over a week before US President Barack Obama Pot had helped, and booze; maybe a little blow when you could afford it. Not smack, though.... is due in Kenya for his first visit to the country since he became president. Sources in Somalia confirmed an overnight air strike had taken place in a Shabaab area of the war-torn country. According to traditional elders near Bardhere town in the southern Gedo region, at least two missiles struck vehicles believed to be carrying Shabaab commanders. "We heard two big kabooms and the information we are getting indicates that vehicles were targeted close to a Shabaab military base," said Abdiwahab Ali, an elder at a village close to the scene. "Village residents are telling us a missile fired from an aircraft struck a vehicle and a nearby military camp belonging to Shabaab," said Hassan Gesle, another elder. Immediately after the attack the mobile phone network in Bardhere was cut off, making it impossible to reach Shabaab commanders for comment. Ahmed Bare, Somali military officer in nearby Elwaq town, said that Shabaab commanders have been leaving Bardhere, one of the few towns still held by the Lion of Islams, ahead of a planned ground assault by Somali troops.
![]() ... Somalia's version of the Taliban, functioning as an arm of al-Qaeda... has been killed in a U.S. drone strike in southwestern Somalia. The official told The News Agency that Dare Not be Named Thursday that the attack Wednesday night targeted a vehicle in which the al-Shabaab commander, Ismael Jabhad, and three other fighters were traveling near the rebel-held town of Bardhere. The official insisted on anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the press. An al-Shabaab official named Abu Mohammed confirmed the attack but gave no details. | |
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Africa Horn |
Troops Stage Raid on 'Senior' Shebab Leaders |
2015-06-23 |
[AnNahar] Somalia's security agency said Monday it carried out a night raid on key targets inside a Shabaab-controled town in southern Somalia, targeting "senior" commanders. Internal security front man Mohammed Yusuf Osman said that members of the U.S.-trained National Intelligence and Security Agency (NISA) carried out the attack inside Bardhere town, a stronghold of the Somali-led Al-Qaeda affiliate in Gedo region. "The specially trained security forces have carried out a well orchestrated attack at key targets inside Bardhere district and they have returned safely after the operation," he said. Osman said a cop shoppe and the district headquarters used by Shabaab fighters and leaders were targeted in the raid. "Our forces interrupted a very senior level meeting of (Shabaab) leaders. The intelligence we had indicated the meeting was to plan for more attacks in Somalia and Kenya," NISA said in an emailed statement, which described the raid as "retaliation" for a Shabaab attack in Mogadishu on Sunday. NISA sources said that a Shabaab leader known as Yusuf Haji was killed in the operation and they were working to confirm whether senior Shabaab commanders, including intelligence chief Mahad Karate and Kenyan university massacre criminal mastermind Mohammed Mohamud -- also known by the aliases "Dulyadin" and "Kuno" -- were in the building at the time of the raid. Witnesses in Bardhere said loud kabooms were heard during the night. "We have heard several kabooms, but it is very difficult to know more because heavily armed Shabaab murderous Moslems are patrolling in the streets," said Hashi Aw Adan, a resident. US drone strikes have targeted and killed a string of Shabaab leaders in recent months, including the group's emir Ahmed Abdi Godane, in September 2014, but a ground assault inside Shabaab territory is unusual. Under pressure in Somalia, the Shabaab is increasingly turning its attention to Kenya. In its bloodiest attack to date four Shabaab gunnies killed nearly 150 people, mostly students, in an attack on a university in Garissa, northeastern Kenya, in April. |
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Africa Horn |
Backgrounder: 'Gentle' Ex-Teacher Accused of Masterminding Kenya Massacre |
2015-04-05 |
![]() Known also by the alias "Kuno", as well as "Dulyadin" and "Gamadhere" -- meaning "long armed" and "ambidextrous" -- the alleged Shabaab member is also wanted in connection with a string of recent cross-border killings and massacres in Kenya's northeastern border region. Police have offered a 20 million shilling ($215,000, 200,000 euro) bounty for information leading to his capture. Mohamud is a Kenyan national and an ethnic Somali -- like more than two million other Kenyans or some six percent of the population. The minority mainly lives in the country's vast, impoverished and arid northeast, where Garissa is one of the largest towns. Kenya's ethnic Somali region is also claimed by the Shehab as part of Somalia itself, and has long been lawless, including the brutal secessionist 1963-1967 "Shifta war". While Mohamud, thought to be in his late 50s, did not take part physically in the Garissa attack, students who survived the massacre described the attackers as men like him: speaking Kenya's Swahili language well, with some suggesting they may have been Kenyan too. One of those tossed in the clink Youse'll never take me alive coppers!... [BANG!]... Ow!... I quit! of suspicion of supporting the gunnies include a Tanzanian -- found hiding in a ceiling with grenades -- and a university security guard, a Kenyan ethnic Somali, according to the interior ministry. Mohamud was reportedly born in Æthiopia into the powerful Somali Ogaden clan, which controls the region where Æthiopia, Kenya and Somalia meet. Photographs show a slender man with a short beard. Kenyan police sources say he was a teacher and then headmaster of a madrassa in Garissa, but later became radicalized and crossed the mostly non-existent border into southern Somalia to join the Islamic Courts Union, a precursor to the Shabaab. An AFP correspondent who met him in the Somali capital Mogadishu in 2008 and 2009, when the majority of the city was under Shabaab control, said Mohamud was a well-known and hardline commander. He commanded a much feared Islamist unit in Mogadishu called the "Jugta-Culus" -- or "heavy strikers", who carried out some of the toughest fighting. Mohamud, however, also appeared in person as educated as well as "quiet and gentle". He appeared in several propaganda films showing Shabaab battles in southern Somalia, and later was a commander in the southern Somali Ras Kamboni militia, under the warlord Ahmed Madobe, a former Islamist commander turned Kenyan ally. In the murky world of Somali gangs, politics and clan loyalties, Madobe's forces helped Kenyan forces seize the key port of Kismayo in 2012. While Mohamud is on the run, Madobe now leads southern Somalia's Jubaland region. But under pressure on their home soil, the Shabaab have reached into Kenya to carry out attacks and find recruits among disaffected youth in the Moslem-majority coastal and northeast regions. In November, the Al-Qaeda-affiliated group grabbed credit for holding up a bus outside Mandera, separating passengers according to religion and murdering 28 non-Moslems. Ten days later, 36 non-Moslem quarry workers were also massacred in the area. A Shabaab statement on Friday warning Kenyans of further bloodshed, said the gunnies carried out the Garissa attack in Dire Revenge for the "systematic persecution of the Moslems in Kenya". Attacks cited include Kenya's 1984 Wagalla massacre, when Kenyan troops trying to put down local conflict killed an unknown number of people - officially less than a hundred, while others claims up to 5,000 people. Cash rewards for other Shabaab commanders -- offered by the U.S., and unlike Mohamud's bounty, in the millions of dollars -- are believed to have led to information that have resulted in a series of air strikes in Somalia to assassinate them. |
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Kenya: Extremists vow more attacks; president responds | |
2015-04-05 | |
It's hopeless lads, always has been. Drink up, we're out of here in the morning. "Kenyan cities will run red with blood," said al-Shabab according to the SITE intelligence monitoring group. The Islamic militants said the attack on Garissa college was in retaliation for killings carried out by Kenyan troops fighting the rebels in Somalia. "No amount of precaution or safety measures will be able to guarantee your safety, thwart another attack or prevent another bloodbath," said al-Shabab. Following the extremists' threats, Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta vowed to take harsh measures against the Islamic militants. mIn a nationally televised address, Kenyatta said his administration "shall respond in the severest ways possible" to the Garissa attack, which occurred Thursday when four gunmen entered a campus and slaughtered students. The military moved in hours later and the gunmen were killed. "We will fight terrorism to the end," said Kenyatta. "I guarantee that my administration shall respond in the fiercest way possible."
Five people have been arrested on suspicion of involvement in the Garissa attack, a Kenyan official said. Kenyan security agencies arrested three people trying to cross into Somalia, said Interior Ministry spokesman Mwenda Njoka in a Twitter post. He said the three are associates of Mohamed Mohamud, also known as Dulyadin Gamadhere, a former teacher at a Kenyan Madrassa Islamic school who authorities say coordinated the Garissa attack. Kenyan authorities have put a $220,000 bounty for information leading to Gamadhere's arrest. Two other suspects were arrested at Garissa college. Authorities displayed the bodies of the alleged attackers before about 2,000 people in a large open area in central Garissa. The bodies lay on the bed of a pickup truck that drove slowly past the crowd, which broke into a run in pursuit. Soldiers monitored the crowd. There was shouting and clouds of dust rose as the vehicle left the area. Spectator Yusuf Mohamed applauded the display, saying authorities wanted to "win the hearts of the people" and clear any doubts that the attackers had been killed. Kenyan authorities initially said the attackers had been strapped with explosives that went off like bombs when they were shot, but investigators later said there were no suicide vests. The four bodies shown Saturday had wounds but were intact. | |
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Africa Horn |
Government names Mohamed Kuno as Garissa University College attack mastermind |
2015-04-02 |
![]() A Sh20 million bounty has been placed on the runaway, Mohammed Kuno, who has been on the run since December last year. Kuno was then identified as the Al-Shabaab ... the personification of Somali state failure... commander who oversaw the killings of 58 Kenyans in Mandera. The corpse count in the latest attack is 15. A security brief seen by the Nation says Kuno is a former teacher and Principal at Madarasa Najah in Garissa and has three aliases; Sheikh Mahamad, Dulyadin and Gamadheere. He joined forces of Evil in Somalia at the time of the Islamic Courts Union, which later metamorphosed into Al-Shabaab. He uses his family members in carrying out terrorist activities in northern Kenya. Kuno, the brief added, is Al-Shabaab's leader for Juba region in Somalia, and currently in charge of external operations against Kenya. Juba region shares a vast border with Kenya, and touches Mandera, Garissa, Wajir and Lamu counties. |
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