Kuwait Times

Somali forces capture Sufi militant camp

-

MOGADISHU: Somali security forces have stormed a camp of a Sufi militia forcing their leaders to surrender after fighting in which 12 people were killed, officials and witnesses said. Fighting broke out between the army and the Ahlu Sunna Wal Jamaa (ASWJ) militia in Dhumasareb, the capital of the semiautono­mous Galmudug region, and intensifie­d on Friday. “The Somali forces took full control of the base of the rival militias and the situation is normal now, the leaders of the Sufi militias have surrendere­d to the force commanders,” Abdullahi Ahmed, a Somali army commander told AFP by phone.

According to witnesses, most of the Sufi fighters surrendere­d during heavy fighting in the evening before the Somali security forces managed to make their

way into their main base late in the morning. The leader of the Sufi group Sheikh Mohamed Shakir who was leading the fight against the Somali security forces briefed the press after surrenderi­ng to the government forces. “We have decided to compromise for the public after learning the situation was getting worse leading to more problems,” Shakir said.

“The government is responsibl­e for our security and that of the town and the public as we have headed our weapons to them,” he said. Earlier this month, the parliament of Galmudug elected Ahmed Abdi Kariye, a former minister backed by the federal government, as president of the region. ASWJ leader Shakir rejected the result and declared himself president. A former Galmudug president, Ahmed Duale, also claimed victory by forming his own parliament.

The Sufi group has played a major role in the fight against the radical Shebab Islamists, supported by AlQaeda, and has controlled the main cities of Galmudug for the past 10 years. In 2017, Shakir agreed to join the regional administra­tion but later distanced himself from it due to disagreeme­nts with its president. He then agreed to a new election before changing his mind and accusing the federal government of manipulati­ng the process to install one if its supporters. Somalia has been plunged into chaos since the fall of the autocrat Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991. —AFP

 ??  ?? BELEDWEYNE: A girl walks towards her tent at a displaceme­nt camp for people affected by intense flooding in Beledweyne, Somalia. —AFP
BELEDWEYNE: A girl walks towards her tent at a displaceme­nt camp for people affected by intense flooding in Beledweyne, Somalia. —AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait