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Showing posts with label Ali Jamma. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ali Jamma. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 04, 2011

Shangole and Mohamed Mohamou

Swedish-Somali Al-Shabaab Leader Reported Dead
TFG Says Fuad Shangole Killed in Garbaharey Clashes
05/03/2011 02:41 AM ET

A senior al-Shabaab commander, Swedish-Somali Fuad Mohmaed Qalaf (Shangole), has reportedly been killed in fierce fighting between pro-government forces and the insurgent group in Garbaharey, Gedo Region.

The Transitional Federal Government’s Gedo Governor, Mohamed Kalil, told the UN-funded Radio Bar Kulan that Shangole was among the dead as al-Shabaab launched a fierce counter-attack on Garbaharey, which the government seized control of without a fight last week.

Local sources told Somalia Report at least 28 combatants were killed when hundreds of al-Shabaab fighters launched mortar attacks and waves of ground troops against the forces of the TFG and moderate Islamist militia Ahlu Sunna wal Jamaa (ASWJ) after morning prayers.

Sources close to al-Shabaab in Bardera, south of Garbaharey, confirmed some senior officials were among the dead - one of them al-Shabaab regional head of public awareness, Sheikh Mohamed Mohamoud. An AWSJ senior commander who spoke to Somalia Report could not confirm the names of those killed, but said the identities of four senior al-Shabaab leaders and foreign Jihadists would be disclosed to the media Tuesday. Kalil said that passports and photographs of the dead would also be revealed.

Shangole spent 12 years in Sweden as an asylum seeker, working as an Imam, before returning to join the Islamic Court Union. When Ethiopian forces ousted the Islamist regime in 2006, Shangole joined the al-Shabaab insurgency. According to Swedish media, he was personally involved in stoning to death a 13-year-old girl and cutting off the hand of a man accused of theft.

Pro-government forces in Garbaharey claimed victory in the fighting, but the situation was still tense late Monday and TFG and ASWJ forces could be seen in and around the town. Reports from Dolow, a border town near Ethiopia, said TFG and ASWJ fighters were sent to Garbaharey to reinforce to the troops.

Residents in Garbaharey had been expecting a fight since Saturday, when al-Shabaab began to dig in around 3 kilometers outside the town.

The government has been making gains in Gedo, a region that borders Kenya and Ethiopia, seizing key towns from al-Shabaab. The militants have shifted to ambushes, laying landmines and launching hit-and-run attacks in an attempt to halt the advance.

The Rest @ Somali Report

Thursday, October 09, 2008

Kenya - Somali Joint Anti-Pirate Patrols to Begin

October 9, 2008: Kenya on Wednesday woke up to the piracy shock in its economy with an announcement that it is teaming up with Somalia to ensure the safety of ships around the Gulf of Aden.

Foreign Affairs minister Moses Wetangula and his Somalia counterpart Ali Jamma said though naval security patrols was the immediate preferred solution, it would only be temporary and urged the international community to help resolve the governance crisis in the Horn of Africa. “

The piracy is just a symptom of an internal problem that should be best tackled by securing lasting peace in Somalia,” Mr Wetangula told journalists in Nairobi .

  • In less than two years, more that 50 vessels have been seized off the Somalia coast and cargo owners forced to part with huge amounts of money in ransoms for the release of their wares.
  • In a latest high profile incident, pirates captured a Ukrainian registered ship MV Faina with some 33 T-72 tanks and other artillery aboard and destined for the Port of Mombasa.
    Its captors are demanding $20 million in ransom even as controversy rages over the ownership of the cargo. There have been claims that the consignment was destined for Southern Sudan contrary to Kenya’s stand that the arsenal belonged to its army.
  • East African households and businesses continued to feel the piracy heat as some merchant ship owners threatened to pull out from the troubled water way unless urgent steps were taken to guarantee the safety of their crew and cargo.
  • “The piracy is indeed posing a major threat to the region and is undermining trade routes in Europe, the Middle East as well as the far East,” Mr Wetangula said, noting that Kenya and Somalia were negotiating with naval super powers such as the UK, the US , Russia and France for a remedial strategy.

Besides working for a stable government in Somalia, he said, the two Eastern Africa nations will conduct joint permanent naval patrols along their coastlines to deal with the pirates. “

  • We want to engage our international partners in permanent patrols along the major trade routes because we face a real risk of merchant ships avoiding the region,” he said.
  • “We want to take advantage of the new UN Security Council, resolution to push for this joint patrols.”
  • The UN Council on Tuesday issued a repeat call urging countries with naval vessels deployed around the Horn of Africa to do whatever is needed to stamp out piracy off the coast of Somalia.

The 15-member council passed a similar resolution in June that gave countries the right to actively combat a surge in ship hijackings around Somalia for ransom. Mr Wetangula said the resolution accorded Kenya and other naval units powers to pursue pirate groups operating on the Somalia coastal water.

We can now use extraterritorial force to get the pirates. "

"We are now free to fight them everywhere and anywhere off the coast of Somalia,” he said.


Somalia’s Foreign Affairs minister Ali Jamma said stabilisation of the governance system in the Horn Of Africa was the ultimate solution and needed to be supported by the international community.

“Piracy is just but one of the elements of the Somalia governance problem. We need an international stabilisation force to come and address the wider causative factor,” he told the press briefing.

He claimed lawlessness had seen illegal groups make huge investments in arms and equipment that were used in obscure ventures such as piracy. Kenya has insisted that the consignment of cargo aboard the MV Faina belonged to its military establishment contrary to claims by the London based news outfit BBC.

On Tuesday, the BBC claimed that it had obtained a copy of the cargo manifest that indicated that the contract for the artillery had been issued on behalf of the Southern Sudan with the Kenya Defence ministry listed as the consignee.

According to the BBC report, contract numbers for the military ware including 33 tanks, rocket-propelled grenade launchers and anti-aircraft guns contained the initials GOSS which ostensibly referred to the Government of Southern Sudan.


Mr Wetangula, however, termed the claims as erroneous saying the initials GOSS referred to General Ordinance Supplies and Security.

while another set of initials MSOD carried on the cargo manifest translated to the Kenyan ministry of State for Defence.

“Such speculation is not healthy and will not in any way help in tackling the matter at hand. The cargo is Kenya’s as we have said several times,” he said.

The minister said Kenya was keen on reclaiming its held cargo but stated they would not part with any ransom payout despite reports that there was a near deal between the MV Faina owners and the pirates that could see the vessel released in the next few days.

“We are not going to pay any ransom because it only served to abate piracy. We dont want to propogate a crime by according the criminals an enticement,” said Mr Wetangula.


The Rest @ Raxanreeb
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