Tuesday November 7 2017
Amisom soldiers during a drill in Somalia. Somali militants Al-Shabaab
have executed four men, among them a Kenyan from Garissa, for allegedly
spying for the Amisom. FILE PHOTO | NATION MEDIA GROUP
Somali militants Al-Shabaab have executed four men for allegedly engaging in espionage against the group.
Among
those executed publicly was a 25-year-old Kenyan, Omar Adar Omar, who
was from Garissa and who was killed by a firing squad on Monday.
The terrorist group accused the four of spying for the Africa Union Mission in Somalia (Amisom).
Kenya Defence Forces is part of the mission that is fighting the terror group in the unstable country.
The
other victims of the execution were identified as Abdirisack Hashi
Abas, Mustaf Moalom Hassan, and Mohamed Aba Mayow, according to a
security document seen by Nation.
FIRING SQUAD
Al-Shabaab militants rounded up residents of Bu’ale Town, including women and children to witness the killing by a firing squad.
“In
areas under its control, Al-Shabaab has carried out numerous
executions, floggings, and amputations after summary trials in cases
ranging from espionage to theft,” the report also said.
It
is not the first time the terror grouped linked to Al-Qaeda, and most
recently the Islamic State, has executed militants suspected of spying,
most of them foreigners.
In 2015, Mustafa Hassan
Mohamed, a former student at Isiolo Boys High School, was executed after
he complained that Al-Shabaab attacks in Garissa and Mandera targeted
Muslims and children.
Mustafa, who dropped out of school to join the terrorists was accused of being sympathetic to Kenya.
NEGOTIATE RETURN
The
document also says that a number of Kenyans, who are high ranking in
Al-Shabaab’s military wing, and faced with threats of execution, are
“looking for a way back to Kenya even if it means negotiating with the
Kenyan government.”
Ahmed Iman is thought to be the highest ranked Kenyan in the terror network.
The militants, are fighting to topple the UN-backed Somalia Federal Government.
Infighting within Al-Shabaab has also escalated in recent months.
One faction wants to remain in partnership with Al-Qaeda while another has pledged allegiance to the Islamic State.
“Currently
the terrorists group is faced with formation of splinter groups. One
comprises local native Somalis and another group is dominated by
international fighters,” the report also says.
It adds that the suspected spies were killed by masked gunmen at an open ground surrounded by the residents.
KDF
KDF
first deployed soldiers in Somalia in October 2011 in the Operation
Linda Nchi before they were amalgamated into Amisom the following year.
Under
Amisom, Kenyan troops are deployed in Sector 2, Somalia but have over
time been carrying out operations in other areas which are not manned,
whenever Al-Shabaab set up camps there.
Other sectors are occupied by forces from Ethiopia, Uganda, Burundi and Djibouti.
The
Juba regional leader, Sheikh Mohamed Abu Abdalla, announced at a public
square in Bu’ale Town that the Al-Qaeda-linked jihadists executed the
four after they were sentenced by an Islamic court.
Bu’ale Town, over 500km south of Mogadishu, is the capital of Middle Juba, a region vastly controlled by Al-Shabaab.
“The
men had been captured several weeks ago and an Islamic court had
sentenced them to death for spying for the enemy,” said Sheikh Abdalla.
“They have been executed today (Monday) for the crime they had committed,” he added.
Additional reporting by Abduladir Khalif, Africa Review correspondent
Read more: http://www.nation.co.ke/news/Kenyan-executed-Shabaab-Somalia/1056-4177434-e9ikp7z/index.html
Read more: http://www.nation.co.ke/news/Kenyan-executed-Shabaab-Somalia/1056-4177434-e9ikp7z/index.html
No comments:
Post a Comment