(People like Mukhtar Roobow not Included. Why?)
The Somalia government has placed a bounty of between 100,000 and 250,000 dollars on the head of 11 most wanted terror suspects in the Horn of Africa nation.
Government spokesman, Ridwan Haji, said Somalia will give 250,000 dollars to anyone with information that would lead to the capture or killing of Al-Shabaab leader Mohamed Diriye.
Haji also said it would give another 150,000 dollars for senior Al-Shabaab commander, Mahad Karate.
He said there was another 100,000 dollars for the capture or killing of nine other leaders of the Al- Qaida linked group, including the mastermind of the Kenya university siege in which 148 were killed.
“This approach will enable us to get information from the public and we promise to keep and protect the confidentiality of those who volunteer any information to the government,” Haji said.
Haji said the cabinet had discussed and approved the rewards over 11 senior Al-Shabaab members including the group’s spokesman Mahamud Rage.
The government also published the sub-clans of the Al-Shabaab leaders.
This followed a similar bounty by the Kenyan government which placed 217,000 dollars for anyone with information leading to the arrest of the Garissa university attack mastermind, Mohamed Mohamud alias Dulyadin.
Somali president, Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, announced this week that his government had adopted a new anti-terrorism strategy to combat the militant group.
However, he did not provide any details regarding the nature of the strategy.
(Xinhua/NAN)
______________________________
Thursday, April 09, 2015
advertisements
|
Somalia’s government has placed a bounty on the top 11 leaders of the militant Islamist al-Shabab group.
Top of the list is its chief Ahmed Diriye with $250,000 (£169,000) offered for information leading to his capture.
A list of their names, nicknames and origins was issued after a cabinet meeting – and a week after al-Shabab’s attack on a Kenyan university.
Official figures put the number of dead in the raid on Garissa University College at 148 – most of them students.
The al-Qaeda-affiliated militants have promised a “long, gruesome war” against Kenya, which has troops in the African Union force in neighbouring Somalia.
The AU and Somali government troops have recaptured major cities from the militants in Somalia in recent years, but al-Shabab still holds territory in rural areas of the south.
Rewards:
Ahmed Diriye: $250,000 – leader
Mahad Warsame Qaley: $150,000 – intelligence chief
Ali Mohamed Raage: $100,000 – spokesman
Other commanders with bounties include
Abdullahi Abdi Jumaale $100,000
Mohamed Mohamoud Nor $100,000
Ali Mahamed Huseen $100,000
Hasan Mahaed Ali $100,000
Abdullahi Ismaan $100,000
Mahamed Abdi Musa $100,000
Mahamed Mahamuud $100,000
Yasin Ismman $100,000