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  • 2
    Oct
    2012
    5:35pm, EDT

    Somali troops take control of al-Shabab stronghold Kismayo

    Stuart Price / AP

    The Somali National Army and the government-allied Ras Kamboni Brigade militia wave the Somali national flag from the former control tower of the airport in Kismayo, southern Somalia, Oct. 2, 2012.

    By NBC News and wire services

    Loud explosions shook the Somali port city of Kismayo Tuesday as Somali government troops and African Union forces took control of the last major stronghold of the al-Qaida-linked militia group al-Shabab, the BBC reported.


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    According to the report, the army claimed it had captured all strategic points of the city.

    "We have full control of the city. The residents of the city have welcomed us warmly," commander of the Somali government army in the Juba region, Ismael Sahardid, told the BBC.


    Al Jazeera reported that three explosions occurred Tuesday, two of which the African Union troops said they had set off. The third blast, which went off at a Kismayo administrative building, was claimed by al-Shabab, according to Al Jazeera.

    A spokesman for al-Shabab's military operations, Sheikh Abdiasis Abu Musab, said the bomb was planted inside a district administration office building now housing Somali troops, and he warned of more attacks.

    "This is only an introduction to the forthcoming explosions," he told Reuters. The militants had succeeded in "killing many," Musab said.

    The government said the explosion caused no casualties.

    Kenyan troops fighting under the AU flag entered Kismayo for the first time on Tuesday after launching an offensive against the port on Friday, forcing the rebels to flee. According to the BBC, al-Shabab had used Kismayo as its main base for more than a year.

    Al-Shabab's strength is hard to gauge. Mohamud Farah, a spokesman for Somalia's government forces, said between 4,000 and 5,000 fighters were hiding in southern regions.

    Hundreds of foreign fighters had joined the insurgency at its peak from countries such as Afghanistan, Pakistan, Kenya andTanzania as well as the United States and Britain, Somalia's last government said.

    "Foreign fighters (also) started leaving when they saw their space was shrinking," a Nairobi-based security adviser said, referring to the offensive by African Union and Somali government troops that has steadily won back rebel-held ground over the past 14 months.

    After the surrender of Kismayo, defection rates among foot soldiers were also expected to pick up, with the rebel group seen as a losing proposition.

    What will be left behind, analysts say, is a hardline core.

    Whether al-Shabab is able to wage a prolonged campaign of guerrilla attacks on Kismayo will largely hinge on the Mogadishu-based government's success in establishing a regional administration that satisfies competing clan interests in the south.

    "If you have marginalized clans, al-Shabab will find allies in them. If all clans are on board, it will be hard for al-Shabab to infiltrate Kismayo," the security adviser said. 

    Reuters contributed to this report. 

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    61 comments

    Hopefully they will be able to keep the terrorist out and bring peace to the Somalia.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: somalia, al-qaida, african-union, featured, kismayo, al-shabab
  • 29
    Sep
    2012
    2:29am, EDT

    Al-Qaida group al-Shabab withdraws from its last stronghold in Somalia

    Stringer / AFP - Getty Images

    The al-Qaida-allied al-Shebab militant group said it had left the city of Kismayo, seen above Friday, after it was attacked by a Kenya-Somalia force.

    By NBC News wire serives

    MOGADISHU, Somalia -- Somalia's al-Shabab rebels withdrew from the southern Somali city of Kismayo overnight, the rebel group and residents said Saturday, a day after Kenyan and Somali government forces attacked the militants' last bastion.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    “We moved out our fighters ... from Kismayo at midnight,'' al-Shabab spokesman, Sheikh Ali Mohamud Rage, told Reuters.

    He threatened to strike back soon. “The enemies have not yet entered the town. Let them enter  Kismayo which will soon turn into a battlefield,” he said.

    African Union troops from Kenya, Uganda and Burundi have combined over the last 18 months to kick al-Shabab out of the Somali capital Mogadishu and take a series of smaller towns that the insurgents fled to.

    Al-Shabab, which formally merged with al-Qaida in February, had earned money by collecting taxes on goods arriving at the Indian Ocean port, so the loss of the stronghold is a double blow to the armed fundamentalist group that began attacks in 2007 and went on to control all but a few blocks of the capital.

    D-Day for al-Qaida in Somalia? Troops storm beaches at last stronghold

    The assault is likely to send al-Shabab fighters underground. Hardcore fighters may unleash suicide bombs and ambushes but less dedicated fighters could melt back into their communities, further reducing al-Shabab's strength.

    At an international one-day summit Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron said the world would "pay a price" if it fails to help Somalia overcome terrorism, piracy and starvation. ITV's Lee Comley reports. 

     

    Born in the USA, but now among Somalia's Islamist terrorists

    The African Union force said that some al-Shabab fighters have already contacted military officials in recent days, saying they wanted to defect from al-Shabab.

    Expert: War on terror at 'critical' point as al-Qaida looks to regroup in Africa

    Speaking on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly in New York Friday, Kenya's Deputy Prime Minister Musalia Mudavadi called the entry of Kenyan forces into the Somali port "a significant victory."

    "This is a major blow to them and we think it's positive for the region and for Somalia," he said. 

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    83 comments

    Congratulations Somalia! Now hopefully you can go back to trying and get your people fed and housed. Just don't let any Big Nation in to play politics with your people. Maybe this is your Century to be fruitful and prosper. Good Luck!!!

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    Explore related topics: somalia, al-qaida, kenya, african-union, featured, kismayo, al-shabab
  • 28
    Sep
    2012
    6:32am, EDT

    D-Day for al-Qaida in Somalia? Troops storm beaches at last stronghold

    By NBC News wire services

    MOGADISHU, Somalia -- Troops launched an amphibious assault before dawn Friday on the al-Qaida militant group al-Shabab's last stronghold in Somalia.

    Other African Union forces were traveling overland to link up with the joint Kenyan-Somali force in the port city of Kismayo.

    The commander of the U.N-backed African Union troops, Lt. Gen. Andrew Gutti, said the aim was to "liberate the people of Kismayo to enable them to lead their lives in peace, stability and security."

    Col. Cyrus Oguna, the Kenyan military's top spokesman, said the attack met minimal resistance, but al-Shabab denied that the city had fallen and said fighting was taking place.

    Oguna told The Associated Press that al-Shabab, which formally merged with al-Qaida in February, had incurred "heavy losses" but that Kenyan forces have not yet had any injuries or deaths.

    "We came from the beach side and we're moving towards the main city. Our surveillance aircraft are monitoring every event taking place on the ground," he told Reuters.

    "For now, we're not everywhere. We've taken a large part of it without resistance, I don't see anything major happening," he said.

    Born in the USA, but now among Somalia's Islamist terrorists

    Residents in Kismayo, a city of about 193,000 people, contacted by The Associated Press said that Kenyan troops had taken control of the port, but not the whole city.

    "Al-Shabab fighters are on the streets and heading toward the front line in speeding cars. Their radio is still on the air and reporting the war," resident Mohamed Haji told The Associated Press. Haji said that helicopters were hitting targets in the town in southeastern Somalia.

    At an international one-day summit Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron said the world would "pay a price" if it fails to help Somalia overcome terrorism, piracy and starvation. ITV's Lee Comley reports. 

    Another resident, Ismail Suglow, told Reuters that he could hear shelling from the ships and that the rebels were responding with anti-aircraft guns.

    "We saw seven ships early in the morning and now their firing looks like lightning and thunder. Al-Shabab have gone towards the beach. The ships poured many AU troops on the beach," he added.

    Expert: War on terror at 'critical' point as al-Qaida looks to regroup in Africa

    On Thursday, residents said planes had dropped leaflets on Kismayo warning civilians to evacuate within 24 hours, Reuters reported. More than 10,000 residents fled Kismayo in the last several weeks.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Resident Faduma Abdulle said Friday that she is now leaving too.

    She said al-Shabab made an announcement on its radio station Friday to trick residents into moving toward the invading troops.

    "They told residents through their radio to loot a Kenyan ship that washed up on the coast, but instead the residents who rushed there were attacked by helicopters," she said. "Some of them have died but I don't know how many. The situation is tense and many are fleeing. It's a dangerous situation."

    A U.S. military spokesman, Lt. Cdr. Dave Hecht, said the U.S. Africa Command, known as AFRICOM, is closely monitoring the situation but that "we are not participating in Kenya's military activities in the region."

    Militants: Taking city not 'a piece of cake'
    Al-Shabab said it would not give up Kismayu easily.

    "Going into Kismayo is not a piece of cake. We are still fighting them on the beach where they landed," Sheik Abdiasis Abu Musab, al-Shabab's spokesman for military operations, told Reuters on Friday. "For us, this is just the beginning, our troops are spread everywhere."

    Oguna said the assault is part of a four-prong attack involving Kenyan forces currently in villages outside Kismayo.

    The amphibious assault landed between 10:30 p.m. Thursday and 2 a.m. Friday local time (3:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Thursday ET) , he said. Some of the troops had night-vision goggles, he said.

    Somali Olympic chief killed in Mogadishu suicide blast

    African Union troops pushed al-Shabab out of Mogadishu in August 2011, ending four years of control of the capital by the fighters.

    The Ugandan and Burundian troops that make up the bulk of the African Union force in Mogadishu have slowly been taking control of towns outside of Mogadishu.

    The expanding control by AU troops sent al-Shabab fighters fleeing south toward Kismayo, north to other regions of Somalia and across the Gulf of Aden to Yemen, according to American and African Union officials.

    Kenya police: Imminent attack by suicide bombers thwarted

    Al-Shabab still holds sway across many small, poor villages of southern Somalia. The loss of Kismayo would be significant.

    The militants taxed goods coming into its port. Al-Shabab lost its major source of financing last year when it was pushed out of Bakara market in Mogadishu, where it also charged taxes.

    The march toward Kismayo by the Kenyan forces has been nearly a year in the making.

    Masked 'goons' kill at least 17 in attacks on churches in Kenya

    Kenyan troops entered Somalia last October after a string of kidnappings inside neighboring Kenya, including of Westerners in and around the beach resort town of Lamu, which is also seeing the construction of a new port and could one day be final point of a new oil pipeline from South Sudan.

    Kenyan forces were bogged down by rain and poor roads for months but have making slow and steady progress toward Kismayo in recent weeks.

    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

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    171 comments

    Get R Done, Boys!

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    Explore related topics: somalia, al-qaida, kenya, african-union, featured, kismayo, al-shabab
  • 5
    Sep
    2012
    6:56am, EDT

    Couple held hostage by pirates for 388 days to set sail on new journey

    When Britons Paul and Rachel Chandler finally gained their freedom from captivity after having been held for months in Africa, they began to plan their next adventure – another journey across the ocean. NBC News' Tazeen Ahmad reports.

    By Tazeen Ahmad, NBC News

    DARTMOUTH, England -- Almost three years after Paul and Rachel Chandler were snatched at gunpoint and taken hostage by Somali pirates, they are returning to the high seas - in the same yacht.

    The British pair were taken prisoner for 388 days while sailing in the Indian Ocean in October 2009 with the pirates demanding a $7-million ransom, a sum the Chandlers knew was far beyond what their family and friends could raise. Hidden in Somalia, they faced the risk of disease and feared getting caught in the cross-fire between multiple gangs or being sold to al-Qaida.


    Their torment now just a memory, the Chandlers are due to set off later this week on a six-month cruise to Brazil aboard the Lynn Rival.

    "It's our life," Paul told NBC News. "Our yacht ... enabled us to get our sanity back. We won't be beaten by these guys."

    The most striking thing about the couple is not that they emerged unscathed from captivity but just how intensely close they are. The strength of their marriage was key to helping them survive the 13-month long nightmare at the hands of Somali pirates.

    Courtesy Chandler family

    Paul and Rachel Chandler's yacht was returned to them after their kidnap ordeal at the hands of Somali pirates.

    Married for more than 30 years, Rachel often finishes Paul's sentences for him, while he hangs on her every word; they grin at each other constantly as if sharing a private joke.

    Throughout our interview at a quiet marina in Devon, on the southwest coast of England, they inched closer together, often leaning in to whisper reassurances or give a squeeze of the hand.

    Courtesy Chandler family

    Rachel Chandler was photographed by her husband Paul while being held hostage in Somalia.

    Rachel, 58, is the chattier of the two with twinkling blue eyes and an easy smile. Paul, 61, is softly-spoken and amiable, but more reserved than his gregarious wife. Underneath the friendly banter there is a steely determination that must have served them well when they faced their biggest challenge at sea.

    Somali pirates claim to kill hostage over ransom delay

    As we sit aboard the Lynn Rival, the Chandlers recounted how they had just enjoyed a break in the Seychelles in October 2009 before setting sail for Tanzania. It was then that their trip turned into a living hell.

    'Morbid souvenir'
    The pirates launched their attack in the middle of the night while Rachel was on watch. She recalls hearing the engine of their vessel approach, a light was shone and then 10 men armed with guns and knives jumped on board yelling. A terrified Rachel froze. She shows me what she calls a "morbid souvenir," a sharp knife in its leather sheath belonging to one of the pirates. She giggles as she admits to having also kept one of the pirate's torn flip-flops; we joke about her putting it up for auction on eBay.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    In their months as prisoners, the couple sometimes wondered if they should have jumped into the midnight ocean at that moment. However, they know that it would only have meant certain death. Instead they spent six days in confined space with Somali pirates while they and their boat were brought to a container ship. From there they realized bigger plans were afoot.

    "We knew we were going to be taken on shore, and when we landed on Somalia, then it really hit home and that was a real low point," Paul said.

    Courtesy Chandler family

    Rachel Chandler, photographed here by her husband during their 388 days in captivity, says she "never stopped wanting to go out to sea."

    The couple were taken in-land where they were held for 382 more days. Somali pirates assume that all Westerners are extremely wealthy, especially those able to take a yacht to sea.  

    Paul, a Cambridge University-educated civil engineer, and Rachel, a former government economist, embarked on a part-time sailing lifestyle in 2005 but knew that raising the $7-million ransom would be almost impossible.

    "They knew that had to keep us alive and so they did feed us most of the time," says Rachel. "At times they tried to threaten us, obviously encourage us to beg for money when they allowed us to speak to our family. All they wanted was money."

    Author Jay Bahadur, who spent a year among the Somali pirates, breaks down their business model, start-up costs, and busts myths about how they choose their target.

    From Sept. 2010: Pirates, insurers profit from high-seas raids

    The weeks and months that followed were difficult. The couple had their hopes of being released dashed so many times, they soon learned to ignore the pirates attempts to upset them. Largely, the couple say, they came to no harm, although Paul does add they were beaten once. This was after they resisted the captors' attempts to separate them. The separation hit Rachel, in particular, very hard.

    "I couldn't eat, I couldn't function, I couldn't think," she says. "I was worrying all the time about how Paul was and what pressure they are putting him under and whether he was well and still alive."

    During this time Paul tried to befriend his captors while Rachel says she coped by daydreaming of rescue, recalling happier times and focusing on getting through from one day to the next.

    The pirates were brought aboard the U.S.S. John C. Stennis, the same ship Iran's navy threatened on Tuesday. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    In total they were held for 388 days, during which time Paul's elderly father passed away.

    Their families finally managed to raise a fraction of the ransom demanded – about $440,000. The pirates took this but refused to return the couple. The couple's relatives were devastated -- and allege that they had very little help or guidance from the British government.

    "Some governments have a reputation of being hard – the French and the Americans particularly," Paul said. "They want to send a message: Don't mess with our citizens. The British government hasn't had the will to do that. "

    Report: Alarming rise in piracy off coast of West Africa

    In the end, help came from an unexpected quarter. A British-Somali businessman reportedly raised some more cash and with some negotiation, secured their release.

    The news flashed across the world. Unbeknownst to them, during their time in captivity the couple had become household names in Britain. The now-famous footage showing their moment of freedom has them looking thin and frail but chatting happily.

    ITV's Juliet Bremner reports on Paul and Rachel Chandler, who were released after being held by Somali pirates for more than one year.

    A stronger, healthier Rachel now tells me through smiles she was stunned by the coverage.

    "It was the same time as [Myanmar's opposition leader] Aung San Suu Kyi [was freed] and to be next to her in the headlines was just unbelievable for us."

    EU forces attack Somali pirates on land for 1st time

    In the time since, the couple have not had any counseling but they say writing their book, "Hostage: A Year at Gunpoint with Somali Gangsters" has provided closure. But the most cathartic times may yet lie ahead, when they take Lynn Rival back to sea.

    "I never stopped wanting to go out to sea," Rachel says. "What happened to us was an extremely unlucky experience. It hasn't changed my love of sailing, cruising or traveling."

    They laugh at suggestions that they are either "bonkers or brave"; their biggest concern is neither flashbacks nor pirates striking again but more their physical fitness. But when pushed, Paul does hint at a new cautiousness.

    Somali pirates go high tech

    "It's a shame because every time we are approached by a little boat at sea, it's probably a fisherman wanting to give you fish in exchange for a cigarette or a bit of water, but we will be more wary."

    After what they've been through, no one, least of all a friendly fisherman, would blame them.

    Follow NBC News' Tazeen Ahmad on Twitter.

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    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook


     

    211 comments

    Dumb is not learning from past experience. I hope the US doesn't have to risk the lives of our military to rescue them if they get into trouble.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: somalia, pirates, africa, somali, uk, yacht, chandler, featured, tazeen-ahmad
  • 1
    Sep
    2012
    1:51pm, EDT

    Somali pirates claim to kill hostage over ransom delay

    European Union Naval Forces

    MV Orna, which was hijacked by Somali pirates in December 2010.

    By NBC News staff and wire services

    MOGADISHU, Somalia — Somali pirates who have been holding a hijacked ship for nearly two years killed a Syrian hostage crew member and wounded another to protest a delayed ransom payment, a pirate leader said.

    This is believed to be the first time Somali pirates have killed a hostage because of a delay in ransom.



    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Hassan Abdi, a pirate commander in Haradhere town, a key pirate center, said that the killing on Wednesday was a message to the owners of the ship MV Orna, hijacked 400 miles northeast of the island nation of the Seychelles in December 2010.

    "The killing was a message to the owners of the ship who paid no heed to our ransom demands," Abdi said by telephone.

    "More killings will follow if they continue to lie to us — we have lost patience with them. Two years is enough," he said angrily.

    The MV Orna is a Panama-flagged, bulk cargo vessel owned by a company in the United Arab Emirates.

    The pirates operating along the Somali coastline of the Indian Ocean were once were believed to be disgruntled and financially motivated Somali fishermen, angry that international trawlers were illegally fishing Somalia's waters. But now criminal gangs are dominating the piracy trade and they have become increasingly violent as international navies attempt to crackdown on their activities.

    Related: Pirates seize 24 sailors on Greek tanker off Togo coast 

    Somali pirates aboard two attack skiffs hijacked the MV Orna after firing rocket propelled grenades and small arms at the ship, the European Union Naval Force said at the time.

    In May last year an undisclosed number of pirates and hostages were forced to abandon the Orna after a fire broke out, said Abdi. It is believed the fire was caused by an electrical problem in the ship's kitchen, he said.

    Author Jay Bahadur, who spent a year among the Somali pirates, breaks down their business model, start-up costs, and busts myths about how they choose their target.

    Watch World News videos on NBCNews.com 

    The European Union Naval Force patrolling the Indian Ocean waters has not heard about the killing, said spokesperson Lt. Cmdr. Jacqueline Sherriff.

    Since, 2008, the EU has maintained a flotilla consisting of between five and 10 warships off the Horn of Africa to fight piracy. It is part of a larger international fleet that includes U.S., NATO, Russian and other warships. The EU taskforce also includes non-EU countries such as Norway, Croatia, Montenegro and Ukraine.

    Stay informed with the latest headlines; sign up for our newsletter

    Pirate attacks off Somalia's coast plunged to 69 in the first six months this year from 163 a year earlier, according to the EU force. Somali pirates were able to seize 13 vessels, down from 21, according to piracy watchdog the International Maritime Bureau.

    This article includes reporting by The Associated Press.

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    201 comments

    This is a real world problem, they are terrorists, and should all be wiped off the earth!

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    Explore related topics: somalia, pirates, orna, mogadishu, somali-pirates
  • 21
    Aug
    2012
    10:29am, EDT

    Reports: Somali Olympic sprinter died when migrant boat sank

    Kerim Okten/ EPA file

    Somalian athlete Samia Yusuf Omar at at the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games.

    By Ian Johnston, NBC News

    A woman from war-torn Somalia who rose to fame by running in the 200 meters at the Beijing Olympics drowned while trying to reach Europe ahead of the London 2012 Games, it has emerged.

    Samia Yusuf Omar died when a boat carrying migrants from Libya to Italy sank in April, according to a report in Italian by the Pubblico blog and other Italian media.


    The BBC said the Italian media reports suggest Omar may have been hoping to find a coach in Europe who could help her reach the London Olympics.

    Somali track and field legend Abdi Bile, who was world champion in the 1500 meters in 1987, was quoted as comparing Omar’s fate with that of Somali-born British runner Mo Farah, who won two Olympic gold medals at the London Games.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    "We are happy for Mo -- he is our pride," he said, according to Pubblico. "But we will not forget Samia."

    There were few details about what happened to Omar, but BBC News said Somalia’s National Olympic Committee had confirmed she had died. NBC News was unable to reach the committee on the phone number listed on its website and an email was not immediately returned.

    Italy's Coast Guard rescues 80 migrants from an overcrowded boat stranded just off the coast of the southern island of Lampedusa. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    There were tributes to Omar from across the world on the comments section of a YouTube video of her race in Beijing.

    “Love, hope and peace from Barcelona Samia. Your still alive in ours hearts. RIP,” one user, frankiee78, said.

    Somali Olympic chief killed in Mogadishu suicide blast

    “Brave is the one who never give up ... Even being the last one on this heat, Samia was proud of being there for her country. Every time when a shooting star will shows in a Somalian sky, it will be Samia the one who is going to be running for her country.... RIP from Columbus, OH,” MrEmilito74 said.

    There were messages from people in the United States, Serbia, Mexico, Portugal, Uruguay and other countries.

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    63 comments

    What a tragic end to a young life. It reminds me that no matter how bad we think our government is, none of us are literally dying to get away.

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    Explore related topics: boat, olympics, libya, italy, somalia, london-2012, sank, samia-yusuf-omar
  • 21
    Aug
    2012
    3:56am, EDT

    Ethiopia prime minister and Africa strongman Meles Zenawi dies

    Cris Bouroncle / AFP - Getty Images, file

    A file picture taken in 2009 shows Meles Zenawi at the 9th Summit of the African Peer Review Forum (APRF) in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt.

    By Alastair Jamieson, NBC News, and wire reports

    Updated at 5:54 a.m. ET: Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi, a senior Africa figurehead, died of an infection while being treated abroad for an undisclosed illness, state-run television said on Tuesday.

    Speculation that Meles, 57, was seriously ill grew after he failed to attend an African Union summit in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa last month.

    "Prime Minister Zenawi suddenly passed away last night. Meles was recovering in a hospital overseas for the past two months but died of a sudden infection at 11:40 (on Monday night, or 4:40 p.m. ET)," state television said.


    Hailemariam Dessalegne, the deputy prime minister, was expected to be sworn in early Tuesday, according to the Twitter account of the Addis Fortune newspaper in Addis Ababa.

    "Deputy Prime Minister Hailemariam Dessalegne will sworn in Parliament soon." Bereket #Ethiopia #MelesZenawi

    — Addis fortune (@addis_fortune) August 21, 2012

    Meles, who led the Horn of Africa country for more than two decades, was born into a middle-class family but dropped out of university to join an armed insurrection led by the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF), according to a BBC obituary.

    Meles seized power in 1991 from Mengistu Haile Mariam's military junta. As president and then prime minister he turned Ethiopia into a key player in regional security affairs.

    His forces, widely regarded as among the strongest on the continent, have entered Somalia twice to battle Islamist militants, winning him accolades from the West for supporting its fight against al-Qaida-linked groups.

    Unspecified condition
    Ethiopia's government said last month that Meles was taking a break to recover from an unspecified condition. Diplomats in Addis Ababa had said Meles was being treated in Brussels for an undisclosed illness, while others said he was in Germany.

    Somali Islamist militants hailed Meles' death as a "historic day" and said Ethiopia, which has troops inside Somalia, would now crumble. 

    "We are very glad about Meles' death. Ethiopia is sure to collapse," Sheikh Ali Mohamud Rage, the spokesman for Al Shabaab told Reuters. Meles twice rolled his troops across the border to help crush Islamist insurgencies. 

    Kenya's Prime Minister Raila Odinga told the BBC he feared for the stability of Ethiopia following Meles' death, citing the continued threat of ethnic violence.

    In an Aug. 16 post on the Think Africa Press blog, entitled Ethiopia: What Might a Post-Meles Era Bring?, Yohannes Woldemariam wrote: "The stability of Ethiopia's regime is anchored on the strength of its military, support from the U.S., and the individual intelligence and charisma of Meles."

    During his time in office Meles was credited with steering Ethiopia towards economic growth and also helped mediate in several regional disputes, including rifts between Sudan and South Sudan.


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    "I believe that any successor to Meles will focus first on domestic issues and for the most part leave the regional and international engagement to other countries, at least until the new leader is firmly established in office," David Shinn, former U.S. Ambassador to Ethiopia, told Reuters recently.

    "For internal security reasons, there will be a continuing focus on Somalia and I do not foresee any significant change towards Eritrea," he said, referring to Ethiopia's arch-foe with whom it fought a decade-long border war.

    But Ethiopia would be less willing to devote a lot of time and resources to problems further afield, Shinn said.

    However, international rights groups say Meles was intolerant of dissent. Several opposition figures and journalists have been arrested under a 2009 anti-terrorism law.

    State television said details of his funeral would be announced soon, the Horn of Africa country's first state burial in modern times.

    Emperor Haile Selassie was laid to rest in 2000, 26 years after he was deposed. His body was found decades later beneath a palace lavatory in what forensic experts said were signs he had been murdered.

    Another deposed leader, Mengistu Haile Mariam lives in exile in Zimbabwe.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

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    38 comments

    Meles has been a loyal servant of rhe USA for the last 20 years. For such a loyal servant, the USA has been providing an economic, political and diplomatic support and cover up for the crime committed against the people of Ethiopia. If there is "no significant change towards Eritrea", it is because  …

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    Explore related topics: somalia, ethiopia, sudan, africa, kenya, featured, meles-zenawi
  • 9
    Jul
    2012
    5:42am, EDT

    London bomber widow Samantha Lewthwaite recruiting female terror squads in Somalia

    Kenyan police are hunting a woman who used a passport in the name of Natalie Faye Webb with this photograph. They suspect that she may be Samantha Lewthwaite, who was married to Jermaine Lindsay, the suicide bomber who blew up a Tube train in London in 2005.

    By Alastair Jamieson, msnbc.com

    Samantha Lewthwaite, the British terror suspect on the run from police in Africa, is recruiting and training female attack squads in Somalia, according to a report.

    The 28-year-old, believed to be the widow of one of the 2005 London bombers, is being protected by militant Islamist group al-Shabab, according to a report in the Daily Telegraph.


    Lewthwaite fled Kenya in December after police in Mombasa linked her to a plot to attack tourist hotels there.

    The newspaper said a blog entry on a website used by Kenyan Islamists said she was now in Somalia and linked to further terror activity in East Africa.

    Widow of London suicide bomber sought in Kenya

    The entry said: “In +252 [Somalia] she [Lewthwaite] commands her 'all-female mujahid terror squad' and conducts her operations against the kuffar [non-Muslims].”

    The newspaper said police sources in Kenya confirmed the blog was in line with their own intelligence.

    "We cannot say that she is connected to any terrorist attacks in Kenya, but it is consistent with our information that she is with Shabab in Somalia," a senior anti-terror officer in Mombasa told the newspaper.

    Lewthwaite, a convert to Islam originally from Buckinghamshire, England and whose father served in the British Army, has not had any contact with her British family for years.

    The July 7 2005 London bombings, known in the UK as ‘7/7’, killed 52 London commuters on underground trains and buses. Lewthwaite is thought to be the widow of Jermaine Lindsey, one of the four suicide attackers involved – although it is not clear if she is another woman using Lewthwaite’s identity. She is thought to have used a passport with another alias, Natalie Faye Webb.

    In June, Kenya police said a woman matching Lewthwaite's description had been seen in Mombasa shortly before a grenade attack on that killed three and left 25 injured.

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    137 comments

    Bet there is a drone loaded with a Hell Fire ( with her name on it ) looking to make a special delivery.

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    Explore related topics: somalia, terror, africa, kenya, islamist, featured, 7-7, al-shabab
  • 30
    May
    2012
    4:11am, EDT

    Report: Obama embraces disputed definition of 'civilian' in drone wars

    Reuters, file

    Tribesmen hold pieces of a missile at the site of a drone attack in Mir Ali, Pakistan, on Jan. 24, 2009 -- just days after President Barack Obama's inauguration.

    By Chris Woods, The Bureau of Investigative Journalism

    Updated at 10:05 a.m. ET: LONDON -- Two U.S. reports published Tuesday provide significant insights into President Obama’s personal and controversial role in the escalating covert U.S. drone war in Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia.

    In a major extract from Daniel Klaidman’s forthcoming book Kill Or Capture, the author reveals extensive details of how secret U.S. drone strikes have evolved under Obama – and how the president knew of civilian casualties from his earliest days in office.

    The New York Times has also published a key investigation exploring how the Obama Administration runs its secret 'Kill List' – the names of those chosen for execution by CIA and Pentagon drones outside the conventional battlefield.


    The Times' report also reveals that President Obama "embraced" a broadening of the term "civilian", helping to limit any public controversy over "non-combatant" deaths.

    As the Bureau's own data on Pakistan makes clear, the very first covert drone strikes of the Obama presidency, just three days after he took office, resulted in civilian deaths in Pakistan. As many as 19 civilians – including four children – died in two error-filled attacks.

    Until now it had been thought that Obama was initially unaware of the civilian deaths. Bob Woodward has reported that the president was only told by CIA chief Michael Hayden that the strikes had missed their High Value Target but had killed "five al Qaeda militants."

    Read more stories from The Bureau of Investigative Journalism

    Now Newsweek correspondent Daniel Klaidman reveals that Obama knew about the civilian deaths within hours. He reports an anonymous participant at a subsequent meeting with the president: "You could tell from his body language that he was not a happy man." Obama is described aggressively questioning the tactics used.

    Yet despite the errors, the president ultimately chose to keep in place the CIA’s controversial policy of using "signature strikes" against unknown militants. That tactic has just been extended to Yemen.

    'Covert' US drone operation is mapped on Twitter

    On another notorious occasion, the article reveals that U.S. officials were aware at the earliest stage that civilians – including "dozens of women and children" – had died in Obama’s first ordered strike in Yemen in December 2009. The Bureau recently named all 44 civilians killed in that attack by cruise missiles.

    'I'd have to go to confession'
    No U.S. officials have ever spoken publicly about the strike, although secret diplomatic cables released by Wikileaks proved that the U.S. was responsible. Now Klaidman reveals that Jeh Johnson, one of the State Department’s senior lawyers, watched the strike take place with others on a video screen:

    "Johnson returned to his Georgetown home around midnight that evening, drained and exhausted. Later there were reports from human-rights groups that dozens of women and children had been killed in the attacks, reports that a military source involved in the operation termed “persuasive.” Johnson would confide to others, “If I were Catholic, I’d have to go to confession.”

    Klaidman describes a world in which the CIA and Pentagon constantly push for significant attacks on the U.S.’s enemies. In March 2009, for example, then Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mike Mullen reportedly called for the bombing of an entire training camp in southern Somalia in order to kill one militant leader.

    Pakistan official: US drone strike hits mosque; 10 killed

    One dissenter at the meeting is said to have described the tactic as "carpet-bombing a country." The attack did not go ahead.

    Obama is generally described as attempting to rein back both the CIA and the Pentagon. But in the case of Anwar al-Awlaki – "Obama’s Threat Number One" – different rules applied.

    An American-born cleric killed in Yemen played a "significant operational role" in plotting and inspiring attacks on the United States, U.S. officials said Friday. Anwar al-Awlaki was implicated in a botched attempt to bomb a Detroit-bound plane in 2009. NBC's Jim Miklaszewski reports.

    According to Klaidman, Obama let it be known that he would consider allowing civilian deaths if it meant killing the U.S.-Yemeni cleric. "Bring it to me and let me decide in the reality of the moment rather than in the abstract," an aide recalls him saying. No civilians died that day, as it turned out.

    In its own major investigation, the New York Times examines the secret US 'Kill List' – the names of those chosen for death at the hands of US drones. The report is based on interviews with more than 36 key individuals with knowledge of the scheme.

    Drone spotting at secret Nevada base stirs up debate

    The Times' report says:

    "[Obama's] first term has seen private warnings from top officials about a 'Whac-A-Mole' approach to counterterrorism; the invention of a new category of aerial attack following complaints of careless targeting; and presidential acquiescence in a formula for counting civilian deaths that some officials think is skewed to produce low numbers."

    It is often been reported that President Obama has urged officials to avoid wherever possible the deaths of civilians in covert U.S. actions in Pakistan and elsewhere. But reporters Jo Becker and Scott Shane reveal that Obama "embraced" a formula understood to have been devised by the Bush administration:

    "Mr. Obama embraced a disputed method for counting civilian casualties that did little to box him in. It in effect counts all military-age males in a strike zone as combatants, according to several administration officials, unless there is explicit intelligence posthumously proving them innocent."

    So concerned have some officials been by this "false accounting" that they have taken their concerns direct to the White House, according to the New York Times.

    Photos document alleged US drone strike victims in Pakistan

    The revelation helps explain the wide variation between credible reports of civilian deaths in Pakistan by the Bureau and others, and the CIA’s claims that it had killed no "non-combatants" between May 2010 and September 2011 – and possibly later.

    Msnbc terrorism analyst Evan Kohlmann discusses why the death of Anwar al-Awlaki  is a big blow to future al-Qaida operations in America.

    The investigation also reveals that more than 100 U.S. officials take part in a weekly "death list" video conference run by the Pentagon, at which it is decided who will be added to the U.S. military’s kill/ capture lists. "A parallel, more cloistered selection process at the CIA focuses largely on Pakistan, where that agency conducts strikes," the paper reports.

    But according to at least one former senior administration official, Obama’s obsession with targeted killings is "dangerously seductive." Retired admiral Dennis Blair, the former US Director of National Intelligence, told the paper that the campaign was:

    "The politically advantageous thing to do — low cost, no US casualties, gives the appearance of toughness. It plays well domestically, and it is unpopular only in other countries. Any damage it does to the national interest only shows up over the long term."

     

    Clarification: An earlier version of this story said that President Obama "personally authorized the broadening of the term 'civilian'" and attributed the redefining of "civilian" to his administration. However, The Bureau of Investigative Journalism now understands that the Obama administration instead embraced a pre-existing policy introduced under President George W. Bush. The Bureau apologizes for this error.

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    368 comments

    Just like Clinton, "I did not have sexual relations with that woman, Ms Lewinsky." He just redefined the word - sex. Funny most women I know, still use the original definition... IMO - Obama should try to defend this definition while standing in front of the Hague Court...

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    Explore related topics: pakistan, yemen, cia, somalia, new-york-times, featured, newsweek, drones, tbij, chris-woods
  • 29
    May
    2012
    9:11am, EDT

    Police arrest two men over Denmark terror attack plot

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    COPENHAGEN - Two Danish brothers originally from Somalia have been arrested on suspicion of plotting a terror attack, Denmark's security service said Tuesday.

    The men, aged 18 and 23, were suspected of "being in the process of preparing an act of terror" after being overheard talking about methods, targets and different weapon types, the Danish Security and Intelligence Service said.


    The agency, known by its Danish acronym PET, said the brothers were arrested late Monday — one in the western city of Aarhus and the other as he arrived by plane at Copenhagen's international airport.

    The suspects are "Danish citizens of Somali origin" who have lived in Denmark for 16 years, the agency said.

    The Copenhagen Post newspaper reported that the men are believed to have connections to the Somali terrorist group al-Shabab, which is affiliated to al-Qaida.

    The men were charged with receiving training with the aim of committing an act of terror, in what the agency said are the first known terror-trained suspects in Denmark.

    "According to PET's assessment, the arrests have prevented a concrete act of terror and the arrests therefore don't lead to a changed evaluation of the terror threat in Denmark," the agency said, adding that the terror threat level in Denmark remains "serious."

    PET's former operative chief Hans Joergen Bonnichsen said previous suspects had been "kitchen-table terrorists" with no experience or training.

    The Scandinavian country has been in the crosshairs of Islamist terror groups after the publication of newspaper cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad in 2005.

    "To me there is no doubt that the latest arrests are rooted in the Muhammad cartoons," Bonnichsen said.

    A Somali man living in Denmark was convicted of terrorism and sentenced to 10 years in prison after breaking into the home of one of the cartoonists with an ax in 2010.

    Last year, a Chechen-born man was sentenced to 12 years in prison for preparing a letter bomb that exploded as he was assembling it in a Copenhagen hotel in 2010.

    Another trial is under way in Denmark against four men accused of plotting a shooting spree at another Danish newspaper.

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    15 comments

    This is why there is so much anti immigration rage in Scandinavia and in reality all across Europe. These Islamic nutcases are growing bolder as there numbers grow in each of these countries. I see a bad moon rising. This planets future looks mighty bleak, glad to be older.

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  • 24
    May
    2012
    5:48am, EDT

    African Union forces intensify attack on al Shabaab rebels in Somalia

    Stuart Price / African Union-United Nations Support Team via Reuters

    A tank with the African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM) advances as a battle group prepares to cross an area of bushland in the west of Deynile, north-west of the Somali capital Mogadishu on May 23, 2012.

    Stuart Price / African Union-United Nations Support Team via EPA

    Ugandan soldiers serving with AMISOM walk through a thicket on May 23, 2012 as a battle group crosses bushland west of Deynile.

    Reuters reports — African Union and Somali government troops stepped up their assault on al Shabaab militants in the northern outskirts of Mogadishu on Wednesday, forcing hundreds of families to flee their makeshift homes and head for the city center.

    The AU force, which already controls most of the capital, is trying to advance through the Afgoye corridor, once a rural area northwest of Mogadishu but now home to hundreds of thousands of Somalis uprooted from their homes.

    Al Shabaab still controls swathes of central and southern Somalia but is being gradually squeezed out of its strongholds by Kenyan and Ethiopian troops who have launched their own incursions into Somalia, and is being pushed out of Mogadishu by AU forces. Read the full story.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    Stuart Price / African Union-United Nations Support Team via AFP - Getty Images

    A Ugandan soldier serving with AMISOM runs for cover during a firefight on May 23, 2012 west of Deynile.

    Mohamed Abdiwahab / AFP - Getty Images

    Civilians flee Afgoye, site of the world's largest displaced people's camp, as African Union and Somali government troops pushed forward their assault on al Shabaab on May 23, 2012.

    Stuart Price / African Union-United Nations Support Team via AFP - Getty Images

    AMISOM soldiers stand in front of an armored personel carrier on May 22, 2012, during a joint AMISOM and Somali National Army (SNA) operation to seize and liberate territory from al Shabaab in the Afgoye region west of Mogadishu.

     

    3 comments

    Religious madness of the extreme form is the worst disease. History has shown it. Somalia, Sudan and many more nations are Islamic religious Nazi hell holes. Here Saudi Arabia has contributed most by promoting Sunni Islamic radical movements like Salaffi and Wahhabi and by inventing al-Qaeda, Muslim …

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  • 17
    May
    2012
    5:54pm, EDT

    Somaliland military court sentences 17 civilians to death

    By msnbc.com staff

    A military court in Somalia's autonomous northern region of Somaliland has sentenced 17 civilians to death for attacking a military base, the BBC reports.

    According to the report, 30 armed members of a clan attacked soldiers in a camp on Tuesday. Seven people, including three soldiers, were killed in the resulting firefight.


    Following the attack, 28 people were arrested and held overnight. A military trial followed, in which three people were acquitted and the trial of three others was postponed.

    Five minors were given life sentences, and the remaining 17 civilians were sentenced to death, after reportedly confessing to conducting the attacks.

    According to the BBC, the attackers claimed the military had built on land that they had owned for generations. An attack on Somaliland's military carries a mandatory death penalty for adults, the BBC says.

    Somaliland, a breakaway, semi-desert territory on the coast of the Gulf of Aden, has been spared by much of the violence plaguing Somalia, but the BBC says land disputes are common.

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    6 comments

    I don't believe the civilians admitted to the attack. We had a shooting in a Somali bar here in a Canadian city in the middle of the afternoon right in front of the bar stools; place was busy and NOT ONE person saw or heard anything. Later, the Somali community complained the police had not caught t …

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    Explore related topics: somalia, death-penalty, attacks, somaliland
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