General Duke Posted September 20, 2010 Dhamaan Raggan waxay isugu jiraan Suxufiyiin iyo Mas'uuliyiin,waxaana dilay Shabaab Wariye Nuuradiin Macalin Mukhtaar ayaa dib u eeg qorshaha dumiska ee Shabaab ku burburinayaan Saxaafadda xorta ah ee Soomaaliya,Maqaalkan wuxuu ka hadlayaa dhinacyo badan Istiraatiijiyadda Shabaab ee ku wajahan burburinta warbaahinta xorta ah ee soomaaliya ka hana qaaday 1991 dii markii ay burburtay Xukuumaddii Militariga ahayd ee dalka maamulaysay 21 sano waa mid muddo soo jiitamaysay, ayadoo loo marayo waddo kasta oo lagu gaari karo oo ay ku jirto in la khaarijiyo shaqsiyaadka loo arko in ay caqabad ku noqon karaan Ajandaha degsan ee Shabaab ee ku abuurista dalka soomaaliya kooxaha Argigixisada Caalamiga ah iyo kordhinta falal dambiyeedyo laga galayo shacabka soomaaliyed 4 tii sano ugu dambeysay ayaa maleeshiyada Al Shabaab waxat weeraro aan lala dhuuman ku qaadeen Suxufiyiin, shaqsiyaad madax ka ah Warbaahinta dalka iyo hay’ado Warfaafineed. August 11 2007 waxay ahayd maalin Magaalada Muqdisho lagu dilay Labo ruux oo mid ahaa Wariye si aad ah looga dhageysan jiray Barnaamijyadiisa Magaalada muqdisho midna ahaa Agaasimihii Idaacadda Hornafrik, Waa Mahad Axmed Cilmi iyo Cali Iimaan Sharma-arke wixii maalintaas ka dambeeyay maleeshiyada Shabaab waxay bartimaameedkooda koowaad ka dhigteen Suxufiyiinta kale ee ka howlgali jirta Magaalada iyo Gobolada dalka. source Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
General Duke Posted September 20, 2010 Tusaale kale Ma jiraa qofka adduunkan ku nool oo ogol in dambiga uu galayo la faafiyo ama la soo bandhigo, waa maya, Shabaabkana sidaas oo kale marna ma ogola in dambiyada ay ka geysanayaan dalka soomaaliya caalamka loo soo bandhigo. UGAARSIGA SHABAAB EE WARBAAHINTA :Nabar aad fileysay naxdin ma lahan “oo waa wax aan wada sugaynay waxaan aaminsanaa in maalin maalmaha ka mid ah Shabaabka ay xiri doonaan dhamaan Idaacadaha dalka ka jira. Ugu dambeyntii maalin ayaa lala xisaabtimi doonaa xubnaha Shabaabka madaxda u ah iyo kuwa gacanta ku siiya ficilada xun ileyn cadaalada ma dhimato. Nuuradiin Macalin Mukhtaar (Diinow) Email nuradiin007@hotmail.com Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
General Duke Posted September 20, 2010 The 2009 Hotel Shamo bombing was a suicide bombing at the Hotel Shamo in Mogadishu, Somalia, on 3 December 2009. The bombing killed 25 people, including three ministers of the Transitional Federal Government,[1] and injured 60 more,[2] making it the deadliest attack in Somalia since the Beledweyne bombing on 18 June 2009 that claimed more than 30 lives.[3] The bombing killed 24 people[1] and injured 60 others.[2] Most of those killed were students, [2] but also among the dead were two doctors, three journalists,[10] and three government ministers—Minister of Education Ahmed Abdulahi Waayeel, Minister of Health Qamar Aden Ali, and Minister of Higher Education Ibrahim Hassan Addow were killed.[5][7] Minister of Sports Saleban Olad Roble was critically injured, hospitalised. He was later reported to have been flown to Saudi Arabia for treatment,[11] where he died on February 13, 2010.[12] The three journalists killed in the bombing were: Mohamed Amiin Abdullah of Shabelle Media Network, a Somali television and radio network;[7][10] freelance photographer Yasir Mairo, who died of injuries in hospital;[10] and a cameraman alternately identified as freelancer Hassan Ahmed Hagi[7] and Al Arabiya cameraman Hassan Zubeyr[10] or Hasan al-Zubair.[8] Their deaths raised to nine the number of journalists killed in Somalia during 2009, including four for Radio Shabelle.[10] The explosion also injured six other journalists, including two—Omar Faruk, a photographer for Reuters, and Universal TV reporter Abdulkadir Omar Abdulle—who were taken to Medina Hospital in critical condition.[10] The dean of Benadir University's medical college was among the wounded.[8] Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
General Duke Posted September 20, 2010 Somalia suicide bomb toll rises Mr Aden had moved to Beledweyne to boost the fight against insurgents Five more people have died of their injuries after a suicide attack on the Somali security minister, bringing the total number of dead to 35. Omar Hashi Aden was buried hours after the blast at a hotel in Beledweyne, north of the capital, Mogadishu. The funerals for some of the other victims, who included Somali diplomats, are being held on Friday. Mr Aden was an outspoken critic of al-Shabab, the militant Islamist group which said it carried out the attack. The group is accused of having links to al-Qaeda. The security minister had recently moved to Beledweyne, some 400km (249 miles) north of Mogadishu, in an effort to stop Islamist insurgents gaining more ground in Somalia, says BBC East Africa correspondent Will Ross. The cost of Somali news The attack - by a suicide bomber who detonated an explosives-laden vehicle at the Medina Hotel on Thursday morning - has been widely condemned. "This deplorable attack once again demonstrates that the extremists will stop at nothing in their desperate attempt to seize power from the legitimate government of Somalia by force," a statement from the African Union, European Union, United Nations and the League of Arab States and regional body Igad said. "These extremists, both Somali and foreigners, failed in their recent attempted coup d'etat but are continuing their indiscriminate violence." Mogadishu itself is calm after nearly 30 people died in a day of heavy fighting on Wednesday. Both the government and insurgents deny targeting residential areas of the city. Somali Prime Minister Omar Abdirashid Ali Sharmarke told the BBC's Focus on Africa programme the transitional federal government was still in control but urged the international community to help "before it is too late". The failed Horn of Africa state has not had an effective national government since 1991 and some four million people - one-third of the population - need food aid, aid agencies say. President Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed, a moderate Islamist, took office in January but even his introduction of Sharia law to the strongly Muslim country has not appeased the guerrillas. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
General Duke Posted September 20, 2010 A nurse treats a wounded civilian at Medina hospital in Mogadishu, 24 Aug 2010 More Than 30 Killed in Mogadishu Hotel Attack Somalia's al-Qaida-linked al-Shabab group has taken responsibility for a suicide attack on a hotel in Mogadishu that has killed more than 30 people, including seven parliament members. Al-Shabab spokesman, Ali Mohamud Rage, says members of the group's "special forces" targeted Somali parliament members residing in Muna Hotel in Mogadishu's government-controlled Hamarweyne district. Rage says al-Shabab fighters were able to easily enter the hotel compound, located near the presidential palace. He claims almost all of the parliament members in the hotel were killed. It is not known how many lawmakers were inside. But Somalia's Transitional Federal Government says six lawmakers and two government officials were killed during the attack. Reports say another lawmaker subsequently died of wounds in the hospital. Witnesses tell VOA that three gunmen, dressed as government security forces, entered the hotel by car after killing two security guards. The gunmen then went door-to-door, shooting indiscriminately. AP A nurse treats a wounded civilian at Medina hospital in Mogadishu, 24 Aug 2010 Government security forces and African Union peacekeeping troops, known as AMISOM, surrounded the building and engaged in an hour-long battle with the militants. Witnesses say when the gunmen ran out of ammunition, two of the men detonated explosives-laden suicide vests. The Somali government initially said that its security forces had captured one of the three gunmen. But later, it issued a statement saying that only two men had stormed the hotel. The government says both men died in the suicide bombing. In addition to the lawmakers and government officials, more than two dozen others, including civilians and several government troops, were killed. The director of a local community radio station reportedly died after being struck by a stray bullet as he watched the battle from a nearby rooftop. Tuesday's attack follows al-Shabab's warning that it is planning a "massive war" against African Union troops in Mogadishu. About 6,000 soldiers from Uganda and Burundi make up the peacekeeping force, which arrived in 2007 with a mandate to protect the U.N.-backed government and key installations. Three years of fighting between peacekeepers and Islamist insurgents have caused thousands of civilian deaths and prompted hundreds of thousands of others to flee Mogadishu. Despite repeated demands by al-Shabab to withdraw the peacekeeping force, Uganda is believed to have sent hundreds of reinforcements to the Somali capital in recent days. Al-Shabab claimed responsibility for dual suicide attacks on July 11 in the Ugandan capital, Kampala, which the militants said were in retaliation for the country's military involvement in Somalia. The extremist group has also threatened to attack Burundi. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
General Duke Posted September 20, 2010 How many Somali's has this group murdered? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites