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Regional News
Somali insurgents unite, profess loyalty to Qaeda
Published Date: February 02, 2010 

MOGADISHU: Somalia's hardline Al Shabaab insurgents have agreed to join forces 
with a smaller southern militia and both groups professed their loyalty to 
Al-Qaeda. The failed Horn of Africa state has not had an effective central 
government for nearly two decades, leading to the rise of warlords, heavily 
armed criminal gangs and pirates who have been terrorizing shipping off its 
long coastline. Western security agencies say the country has also become a 
safe haven for Islamist militants, including foreign jihadists, who are using 
it to plot attacks across the region and beyond. In a statement dated last 
Friday but seen by Reuters yesterday, Al Shabaab and the smaller Kismayu-based 
Kamboni rebel group said they had put their differences behind them.

We have agreed to join the international jihad of Al-Qaeda ... We have also 
agreed to unite Al Shabaab and Kamboni mujahideen to liberate the Eastern and 
Horn of Africa community who are under the feet of minority Christians," the 
statement said. "We have united to revive the military strength, economy and 
politics of our mujahideen to stop the war created by the colonizers, and to 
prevent the attacks of the Christians who invaded our country." In this 
context, "Christians" is believed to refer to Ethiopian troops who invaded 
Somalia in late 2006 and then withdrew, and to Ugandan and Burundian 
peacekeepers serving with the African Union's AMISOM force in Mogadishu.

The statement appeared to have been signed by senior rebels including Sheikh 
Hassan Turki, commander of the Kamboni militia, and the reclusive Al Shabaab 
leader, Ahmed Abdi Godane. Security experts believe Shabaab's total manpower is 
no more 5,000, while there are a few hundred Kamboni militiamen. In the capital 
Mogadishu, insurgents fired mortar bombs at the presidential palace overnight, 
prompting return fire by troops there that killed at least 16 people, medical 
officials and residents said.

ARTILLERY BATTLES IN MOGADISAHU
Violence has killed at least 21,000 people in the failed Horn of Africa nation 
since the start of 2007 and driven another 1.5 million from their homes, 
helping trigger one of the world's worst humanitarian emergencies. Al Shabaab 
rebels routinely fire at the white-washed hilltop Villa Somalia palace compound 
from other parts of Mogadishu. Troops at the palace often launch shells back. 
Residents and medical officials said several bombs struck around the city's 
northern Suqa Holaha, or livestock market. "At least 16 people died and 71 
others were wounded in four districts of Mogadishu," Ali Yasin Gedi, vice 
chairman of the Elman Peace and Human Rights Organization said.

At an African Union summit in the Ethiopian capital on Friday, Somalia's 
Foreign Minister Ali Jama' Jangeli called for more AU troops to help about 
5,000 peacekeepers from Uganda and Burundi who are based in the Somali capital. 
His Kenyan and Sudanese counterparts backed the call. Djibouti has said it 
would send 450 soldiers soon. On Sunday, Al Shabaab spokesman Sheikh Ali 
Mohamud Rage called on Djibouti to reconsider its decision. "We warn the 
Djibouti government and strongly recommend that it not send its troops here, 
otherwise there will be bad consequences for it," Rage told reporters in 
Mogadishu. - Reuters 

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