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Somalia's al-Shabab says it has killed British spy | Somalia's al-Shabab says it has killed British spy |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Somali militant group al-Shabab says it has killed five men it accuses of spying - one of them for the UK. | Somali militant group al-Shabab says it has killed five men it accuses of spying - one of them for the UK. |
According to a jihadi website, he had admitted giving information to British intelligence services about al-Shabab supporters living in the UK. | According to a jihadi website, he had admitted giving information to British intelligence services about al-Shabab supporters living in the UK. |
The five men, aged between 22 and 36, were shot dead in a public execution on Tuesday in an area under the control of the Islamist group. | The five men, aged between 22 and 36, were shot dead in a public execution on Tuesday in an area under the control of the Islamist group. |
Another was said to be working for the Somali government. | Another was said to be working for the Somali government. |
That individual is alleged to have attached a device to a vehicle in an al-Shabab convoy which had then helped American drones to carry out an air strike. | That individual is alleged to have attached a device to a vehicle in an al-Shabab convoy which had then helped American drones to carry out an air strike. |
Al-Shabab told Reuters news agency that three of the men were US spies who had helped guide drones to carry out strikes in Somalia. | Al-Shabab told Reuters news agency that three of the men were US spies who had helped guide drones to carry out strikes in Somalia. |
The UK, US and Somali governments have not yet commented on the reports. | The UK, US and Somali governments have not yet commented on the reports. |
The identity of the alleged British spy has not yet been confirmed, despite earlier reports that he was a British national. | The identity of the alleged British spy has not yet been confirmed, despite earlier reports that he was a British national. |
Separately, local police say suspected al-Shabab militants shot dead two non-Muslim teachers at a school compound on Tuesday night in northern Kenya, close to the Somali border. | |
BBC correspondents say it is possible they were targeted for reasons of their religion, since the militant group has singled out Christians during previous attacks in Kenya. | |
How big a threat is al-Shabab? | How big a threat is al-Shabab? |
Al-Shabab, which is part of al-Qaeda, was forced out of the capital, Mogadishu, in 2011 by a combination of Somali government forces and African Union troops but it still operates freely in many rural parts of southern Somalia, where it often enforces Islamic law, or Sharia. | Al-Shabab, which is part of al-Qaeda, was forced out of the capital, Mogadishu, in 2011 by a combination of Somali government forces and African Union troops but it still operates freely in many rural parts of southern Somalia, where it often enforces Islamic law, or Sharia. |
This is not the first time it has killed people it accused of spying. | This is not the first time it has killed people it accused of spying. |
In December 2017, al-Shabab killed five men, among them a teenage boy, whom it accused of working for US and Kenyan intelligence. | In December 2017, al-Shabab killed five men, among them a teenage boy, whom it accused of working for US and Kenyan intelligence. |
As well as battling for control of Somalia, al-Shabab has staged terror attacks in some neighbouring countries. | |
In 2013 in Kenya, 67 people were killed in a mass shooting by al-Shabab militants at the Westgate shopping mall in Nairobi. | |
The group was also behind Somalia's deadliest bombing, in which at least 500 people were killed by a truck laden with explosives in Mogadishu last year. | The group was also behind Somalia's deadliest bombing, in which at least 500 people were killed by a truck laden with explosives in Mogadishu last year. |
What are the UK and US doing in Somalia? | |
There are 500 US troops in Somalia supporting the UN-backed government against the militants. A smaller number of British soldiers are also deployed there. | |
In recent years the US has carried out regular air strikes on targets in Somalia. These have been led by Africom, a body established in 2007 to run all of the US's military operations in Africa. | |
It is unclear how many active missions Africom currently has, but US media reported that it had carried out a total of 674 operations across the continent in 2014. | |
A British Army team with medical, logistical and engineering roles is also in Somalia supporting the United Nations mission against the Islamist militants. | |
The biggest number of troops by far - 22,000 - has been supplied by the African Union's Mission in Somalia (Amisom). | |
Plans by the AU to withdraw more than 1,000 of its troops have been put on hold until 2019 after the UN security council intervened. | |
This followed a cut in funding by the European Union, amid allegations of corruption within the AU force, made up of personnel from Uganda, Burundi, Kenya, Ethiopia and Djibouti. |