Daqane Posted November 14, 2012 On 19 July 2012, attackers in Mogadishu reportedly assassinated Maxamed Ali Hussein, who served as the Deputy Director-General of the Ministry of Finance in the Transitional Federal Government (TFG). Reports indicate that Mr. Hussein was gunned down as he was about to enter a house in the Suuqa Xoolaha neighborhood of the Heliwaa district, located in the north-western outskirts of the capital. The attack comes as Somalis in the capital prepare for the first evening of Ramadan. No individual or group has claimed responsibility for Mr. Hussein’s death, but the attack is the second assassination of a TFG official in Mogadishu in the last week. The Usual Suspects On 16 July 2012, al-Shabaab claimed responsibility for a car bomb that killed Member of Parliament (MP) Mr. Mohamud Abdi (Garweyne) and a female passenger, as well as injuring at least six others. Though al-Shabaab has withdrawn its main forces from the capital, the group has reportedly developed “hit squads” that would be responsible for the types of attacks that claimed the life of Mr. Hussein and Mr. Garweyne. Political Payback? New reports indicate that Mr. Hussein may have been interviewed by the United Nations Somalia-Eritrea Monitoring Group (UN SEMG), whose leaked report revealed widespread corruption among Somalia’a top officials. If true, this leaves the question whether Mr. Hussein’s divulsion of sensitive information to the UN SEMG on government corrutption could have created motives for other individuals or groups to organize the attack–aside from the usual suspects in al-Shabaab. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites