Somali security forces has
launched a new disarmament campaign that has netted some 500 guns and sparked
gun battles in a capital that is awash with weapons, said officials who want to
get rid of the weapons before they fall into the hands of al-Qaeda-linked
fighters.
When Somali national Army
(SNA) and African Union troops(AMISOM) started gaining ground in Southern
Somalia cities and villages, Islamic Militants of Al-Shabaab fighters turned
their war strategy to other areas like Somaliland, Puntland, Khatumo and Kenya.
ON TRAIL OF THE
AL-SHABAAB TERRORIST GROUP IN KENYA
Somali National
security (NSS) forces shot and
killed Nour Barahow, a senior commander of Al-Shabaab’s intelligence unit
leader in Mogadishu.
There are numerous intelligence reports of foreign jihadists in Somalia are leaving from Somalia to Iraq, Yemen and Syria to the new Islamic State in Iraq, and Al-shabaab remaining forign jihadist has again claimed to be allied with new Islamic state of Shaam (Lebnon, Syria, Iraq and Palestine).
Elements of Somali
militants of Al-shabaab are moving from Somalia to neighbouring Kenya and Ethiopia,
accrding to sources close to AMISOM military intelligence unit. Al-shabaab was
banned as a terrorist group Worldwide is believed its stronghold and fighters is
decreasing, it have between 2,000 and 3,000 young teen-age fighters in Somalia.
According to Geeska
Afrika Online security reporter, Business,
government schools, churches, police stations, refugee camps, bus stations, hotels,
night clubs and a shopping mall have been mostly targeted by Al-Shabaab attacks
in Kenya, to damage Kenyan economy and tourism industry, that is why Most of
western countries including Russia, japan and China have issued travel
advisories to their citizens visiting Kenya and Uganda.
Al-Shabaab leader Ahmed
Godane also Known as Abu-Zubair,
Godane comes from Hargeisa, the capital of Somaliland, several of his close
allies have been assasinated or killed in Southern Somalia.
To empower Somali national
Army and intelligence units, the Danish trade and development minister, Mogens
Jensen, has send 19 million kroner in a special account to Somalia to aid the
government and African Union troops in their struggle against Al-Shabaab terr
tactics.
The Mogadishu Gun markets (Bakaaraha)
have a long history in Mogadishu, a city once ruled by clan warlords.
Disarmament campaigns, run both by weak Somali governments and by the U.S.
military in the early 1990s, have had limited success. But the government is
trying again.
Troops raided a military
official’s home tied with Warlords and discovered guns that
authorities said were going to be sold to Al-Shabab rebels. The official was
arrested after a heavy firefight, said Mohamed Yusuf, the spokesman for
Somalia’s national security ministry. Security forces also raided a garage
belonging to the former anti-U.S. warlord Osman Atto, who died last year,
seizing rocket-propelled grenades and bombs, Yusuf said.
Raids over the last week
have netted some 500 guns and hundreds of boxes of ammunition, he said.
Two more night
raids followed against a former U.S.-backed anti-Islamist warlord, Abdi Nurre
Siad, who escaped during a firefight at his home. Troops also raided a home
belonging to a Somali member of parliament who is the son of a former warlord.
No weapons were found, Yusuf said.
“So far we have made good
progress in the disarmament plan,” said Yusuf. “This plan is to ensure the
stability of Mogadishu.”
One Somali intelligence
official was killed during the operations, according to Yusuf.
But even as officials seek
to remove weapons, others still come into the Horn of Africa country.
The Small Arms Survey, a research project based in
Switzerland, says world governments in recent years have covertly delivered
“tens of thousands of small arms and light weapons to various armed groups in
Somalia despite a long-standing U.N. arms embargo.” The group said those
weapons range from assault rifles to third-generation SA-18 MANPADS, a portable
air defense system.
Somali civilians own more
than 500,000 guns, the group estimates.
During the early 1990s, U.S. Marines fighting warlord Mohammed Farah Aidid
tried to carry out a disarmament campaign. It had only limited success. One
challenge the government faces is locating buried weapons. Mogadishu gun
runners have long buried their caches to avoid detection.
Some Somalis believe the
campaign is a political witch hunt aimed at weeding out rivals of the country’s
leadership as the country gears up for a proposed 2016 national election.
Whether that planned election happens will depend on the state of security in
Somalia, specially, Puntland-Khatumo issue or Somaliland policies of secession.
Dahir Amiin Jesow, a
Somali legislator who heads a security committee in the parliament, said the
disarmament campaign should be done according to the law. A proposed
disarmament law has been approved by the government’s cabinet but hasn’t yet
been voted on by parliament.
“Somalia disarmament is a
good solution for stability in Mogadishu. However, negotiations and even buying
the weapons from its Warlord owners would help to avoid certain grievances in
Mogadishu Somalia,” according to Mahad Awad, deputy House speaker.
Source: http://www.geeskaafrika.com/somalia-al-shabaab-is-history-warlords-are-next/5028/

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