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US drone strike in Somalia kills top al-Shabaab explosives expert | US drone strike in Somalia kills top al-Shabaab explosives expert |
(about 4 hours later) | |
A US drone strike in Somalia has killed two senior members of the Islamist militant group al-Shabaab, including its top explosives expert, officials and residents have said. | A US drone strike in Somalia has killed two senior members of the Islamist militant group al-Shabaab, including its top explosives expert, officials and residents have said. |
The strike is a further sign of intensifying US military intervention against the al-Qaida affiliate in the wake of September's attack on the Westgate mall in Nairobi, Kenya, which left 70 people dead. | The strike is a further sign of intensifying US military intervention against the al-Qaida affiliate in the wake of September's attack on the Westgate mall in Nairobi, Kenya, which left 70 people dead. |
US officials confirmed there had been a counter-terrorism strike and said Ibrahim Ali, believed to be al-Shabaab's lead explosives expert, was among the dead, according to the Associated Press (AP) and Reuters. The New York Times quoted a US military official as saying Ali was known for his skill in building and using homemade bombs and suicide vests and had been tracked for a long time. | US officials confirmed there had been a counter-terrorism strike and said Ibrahim Ali, believed to be al-Shabaab's lead explosives expert, was among the dead, according to the Associated Press (AP) and Reuters. The New York Times quoted a US military official as saying Ali was known for his skill in building and using homemade bombs and suicide vests and had been tracked for a long time. |
Witnesses to Monday's strike said the drone fired a missile at a car in the outskirts of Jilib town in the Middle Jubba region, some 75 miles north of the port of Kismayo in southern Somalia. | Witnesses to Monday's strike said the drone fired a missile at a car in the outskirts of Jilib town in the Middle Jubba region, some 75 miles north of the port of Kismayo in southern Somalia. |
"This afternoon, I heard a big crash and saw a drone disappearing far into the sky. At least two militants died," Hassan Nur, a resident in the area, told Reuters. "I witnessed a Suzuki car burning, many al-Shabaab men came to the scene. I could see them carry the remains of two corpses. It was a heavy missile that the drone dropped. Many cars were driving ahead of me but the drone targeted this Suzuki." | "This afternoon, I heard a big crash and saw a drone disappearing far into the sky. At least two militants died," Hassan Nur, a resident in the area, told Reuters. "I witnessed a Suzuki car burning, many al-Shabaab men came to the scene. I could see them carry the remains of two corpses. It was a heavy missile that the drone dropped. Many cars were driving ahead of me but the drone targeted this Suzuki." |
An al-Shabaab member who gave his name as Abu Mohamed also told AP that one of those killed was the organisation's top explosives expert, known as Anta. A Somali intelligence official in Mogadishu said the attack took place as al-Shabaab members went to intervene in a clan dispute. | An al-Shabaab member who gave his name as Abu Mohamed also told AP that one of those killed was the organisation's top explosives expert, known as Anta. A Somali intelligence official in Mogadishu said the attack took place as al-Shabaab members went to intervene in a clan dispute. |
Earlier this month, US navy Seals raided a coastal Somali town in an attempt to capture a Kenyan al-Shabaab member but were forced to withdraw under heavy fire. The target was Abdulkadir Mohamed Abdulkadir, known as Ikrima, identified as the lead planner of a plot to attack Kenya's parliament building and the UN office in Nairobi in 2011 and 2012. | |
The heightened US activity comes as efforts by the UN-mandated African Union force, Amisom, appear to have stalled and al-Shabaab adapts to guerrilla warfare. Last week Ban Ki-moon, the UN secretary general, said: "In the face of these threats, and in the absence of enablers and force multipliers that would have permitted a sustained offensive against al-Shabaab, the Somali national army and Amisom have now assumed a largely defensive, static posture." | The heightened US activity comes as efforts by the UN-mandated African Union force, Amisom, appear to have stalled and al-Shabaab adapts to guerrilla warfare. Last week Ban Ki-moon, the UN secretary general, said: "In the face of these threats, and in the absence of enablers and force multipliers that would have permitted a sustained offensive against al-Shabaab, the Somali national army and Amisom have now assumed a largely defensive, static posture." |
The US army operates drones from bases in Dijbouti and in Arba Minch in southern Ethiopia and has reportedly carried out several strikes in recent years. Al-Shabaab said in January 2011 that a missile launched from a drone had killed Bilal el-Berjawi, a Lebanese fighter who held a British passport. Another missile killed four foreign militants south of Mogadishu in February 2012. | |
Al-Shabaab, which lost control of the capital in 2011, promised more attacks on Kenyan soil unless Kenya withdraws its troops from Somalia. | Al-Shabaab, which lost control of the capital in 2011, promised more attacks on Kenyan soil unless Kenya withdraws its troops from Somalia. |
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