A Somali militia opposed to Islamist insurgents al Shabaab praised a U.S. commando raid that killed one of the region’s most wanted al Qaeda suspects. U.S. special forces in helicopters struck a car in rebel-held southern Somalia Monday, killing the Kenyan said to have built the truck bomb that claimed 15 lives at an Israeli-owned beach hotel on the Kenyan coast in 2002.
Posts Tagged ‘southern Somalia’
Dutch held ‘heading for Somalia’

Four Dutch nationals have been arrested in Kenya on suspicion of aiding insurgents in Somalia.
The four 21-year-olds, three born in Morocco, the other in Somalia, were stopped by Kenyan police as they were heading for the border.
The local police were not satisfied with their claims to be tourists.
There have been a series of recent reports that young men from the US, Europe and South Asia have joined the Somali insurgents in a "holy war".
Lamu District Commissioner Stephen Ikua told the BBC the four had travelled by boat from Lamu island before hiring a tractor.
He said it was possible they were headed to Somalia to assist one of the insurgent groups there and they would be interrogated in Nairobi.

The Kenyan authorities say they have arrested and deported several other young men from Tanzania and the United States in the same area for the same reason.
BBC East Africa correspondent Will Ross says in recent months eyewitnesses in Somalia have reported seeing foreigners amongst the insurgent fighters known as al-Shabab.
Al-Shabab wants to overthrow the UN-backed transitional government in Somalia and put in place strict Islamic law.
The hardline Islamists control much of southern Somalia.
Foreigners have headed to Somalia to take part in what they consider a holy war or jihad.
The authorities in Minnesota in the United States are investigating claims that several young men were lured to Somalia to fight.
Since early May, the fighting between the insurgents and the forces loyal to Somalia’s government has displaced nearly 250,000 people.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Reese Schonfeld: Three Updates and an Addendum
Every time Dan Rather was on camera, there was an elephant in the room –there is no question that it was Dan Rather who pushed Walter Cronkite out at least a year before he wanted to go.
Somali Islamists ban UN agencies

Somali militants accused of links to al-Qaeda have banned three United Nations agencies from operating in two southern towns they control.
Members of al-Shabab also raided the offices of the UN Political Office for Somalia, the Development Programme and the Department of Safety and Security.
Al-Shabab accused the agencies of being enemies of Islam and Somali Muslims.
The UN has no permanent staff in Somalia, but runs its operations from neighbouring Kenya.
Staff unharmed
One unnamed UN staff member told Reuters news agency that armed militia had surrounded the compound in Baidoa and taken away three cars.
Another official told AFP news agency that al-Shabab members had "told staff not to worry, nobody will harm them".
AFP reported that offices in the town of Wajid had also been targeted.
Other UN offices in both towns were not affected.
A statement broadcast on local radio from al-Shabab said the three UN organisations were "working against the benefit of the Somali Muslim population and against the establishment of an Islamic state in Somalia".
Al-Shabab and its allies control much of southern Somalia and swathes of the capital Mogadishu.
They are fighting to unseat the Somali President Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed, a moderate Islamist, who took office in January.</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Sharia trial for Somalia hostages

Two French security advisers seized in Somalia will be tried under Sharia law, an official from their captors, the Islamic al-Shabab militia, says.
The unnamed spokesman said they would be tried for spying and "conspiracy against Islam".
The two, who were training government troops, were kidnapped by gunmen in a Mogadishu hotel on Tuesday and later handed over to al-Shabab insurgents.
Al-Shabab and its allies control much of southern Somalia.
The al-Shabab official said no date had been set for the trial of the two men.
Meeting al-Shabab Somali justice, Islamist-style
They were on an official mission to train the forces of the interim government, which has recently appealed for foreign help to tackle Islamist insurgents.
Moderate Islamist President Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed was sworn in in January after UN-brokered peace talks.
He promised to introduce Sharia law but the hardliners accuse him of being a western stooge.
Somalia has not had a functioning national government since 1991.</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Extremists ‘have French hostages’

A second French hostage has been handed over to the hard-line Somali Islamist group, al-Shabab, government sources have told the BBC.
"If they are in the hands of al-Shabab it is very, very serious," said a source in the Somali presidency. The group carries out public executions.
The first man was reportedly given to al-Shabab on Thursday.
The two security advisers, who were training government troops, were seized from a Mogadishu hotel on Tuesday.
BBC East Africa correspondent Will Ross says that, unlike other insurgent groups in Somalia, al-Shabab is unlikely to be holding the men for ransom.
In its eyes, the pair would be enemies, he says.
"They could kill them, saying they are Christian, not Islamic and they could manipulate the situation for their own political demands, including their call for African Union troops to leave," the presidential source told the BBC.
He said the government was not able to negotiate directly with al-Shabab but had been talking to people claiming to be linked to the group holding the two French men.
Public killings
Al-Shabab and its ally Hizbul-Islam are fighting the UN-backed interim government and together control much of southern Somalia.
Both groups are said to have links to al-Qaeda and have been reinforced by foreign fighters.
Meeting al-Shabab Somali justice, Islamist-style
A group of gunmen dressed in military uniform seized the men on Tuesday morning and handed them over to Hizbul-Islam.
The move apparently sparked a row with al-Shabab, which now seems to have persuaded the other group to hand the two men over.
BBC Somali Service editor Yusuf Garaad Omar says al-Shabab is known for being the more radical of the two groups.
He says al-Shabab cares little for its public image and has carried out killings on camera.
Somali Prime Minister Omar Abdirashid Ali Sharmarke on Thursday warned Hizbul-Islam it would "bear responsibility for any harmful action taken against the hostages".
The French advisers were helping to train the forces of the government, which has recently appealed for foreign help to tackle the Islamists.
The US last month confirmed that it has sent weapons to the government, which is also being protected by some 4,000 African Union troops in Mogadishu.
Somalia has not had a functioning national government since 1991.
Moderate Islamist Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed was sworn in as president in January after UN-brokered peace talks.
He promised to introduce Sharia law but the hardliners accuse him of being a western stooge.</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.



