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Somalia orders media not to publish al-Shabab ‘propaganda’

09-10-2022

MOGADISHU: Somalia’s government has declared a crackdown on media organizations that publish what it deems propaganda for the armed group al-Shabab, warning offenders will be punished.

The armed forces, backed by local militias and international allies, have waged an aggressive campaign against the al-Qaeda-linked group.

“I want to inform the Somali media and all Somali people in general that we will regard all al-Shabab related propaganda coverage including their terrorist acts and their ideology – as punishable crimes,” Deputy Minister for Information, Culture and Tourism Abdirahman Yusuf said on Saturday.

“The Somali government is totally banning all kinds of coverage relating to the terrorist ideology and acts of intimidation by (al-Shabab),” he told reporters.

Yusuf said the government also launched cyber-operations against “terrorist accounts” on social media and suspended more than 40 on Facebook and Twitter.

Recently elected President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud has pledged to defeat the armed group after countless deadly attacks.

In August, al-Shabab fighters unleashed a gun-and-bomb assault in a deadly 30-hour siege of a hotel that killed 21 people.

The armed group was driven out of Mogadishu by African Union forces in 2011. However, it still controls swaths of the countryside.

The deadliest attack occurred in October 2017 when a truck packed with explosives blew up in Mogadishu, killing 512 people.

Somalia’s government says it has killed Abdullahi Nadir, one of the co-founders of the armed group al-Shabab, in an operation with international partners.

Earlier, the country’s information ministry said in a statement late on Sunday that the operation that killed Nadir happened on Saturday. It said he was al-Shabab’s chief prosecutor and was in line to replace the group’s leader, Ahmed Diriye, who is sick.

“His death is a thorn removed from the Somali nation,” the statement said. “The government is grateful to the Somali people and international friends whose cooperation facilitated the killing of this leader who was an enemy of the Somali nation.”

In recent weeks, Somali security forces have touted gains made against the al-Qaeda-linked group while fighting alongside local self-defence groups. But al-Shabab has continued to conduct deadly raids, including two last Friday that killed at least 16 people and another on Monday that police said killed at least five.

Since 2006, the group has killed tens of thousands of people in bombings in its fight to overthrow Somalia’s Western-backed central government and implement its interpretation of Islamic law.

Somalia’s President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, elected by lawmakers in May, has promised to take the fight to the rebels after three years in which his predecessor, consumed by political infighting, took little action against al-Shabab. In August, Mohamud appointed a former al-Shabab spokesman Muktar Robow into his new cabinet.

Somalia’s military is supported by US troops and drones and an African Union peacekeeping mission. It was not immediately clear which international partners participated in the operation that killed Nadir.

In al-Shabab’s attack on Monday, two car bombs in the central city of Beledweyne killed at least five people including soldiers and local officials, a police officer told Reuters, adding that more than a dozen others had been injured and the death toll could rise.

Asked for comment, the group’s military operations spokesman said it was behind the Beledweyne attack, in which he said dozens of people, including officials and soldiers, had been killed. (Int’l News Desk)

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