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Al- Shabaab is wealthy – UN

Islamist insurgents moving millions of dollars through Somalia’s formal bank system

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SOMALIA’S Islamist insurgents are moving millions of dollars through the formal bank system and appear to be investing in businesses and real estate, according to a UN report offering a rare glimpse into their finances.

Al- Shabaab has for years been battling Somalia’s internatio­nally- backed government to impose strict Islamic law in the anarchic nation.

“Al- Shabaab remains in a strong financial position and is generating a significan­t budgetary surplus, some of which is invested in property purchases and businesses in Mogadishu,” said the report by the UN sanctions panel on Somalia.

The report by the group, which monitors compliance with an arms embargo on Somalia, is due to be published this week.

The al- Qaeda- linked Somali militants carry out frequent bombings and attacks at home and have also killed hundreds of civilians in Kenya and Uganda.

Earlier this year, al- Shabaab killed three Americans at a US military base in Kenya. The UN report included details on two bank accounts held at Salaam Somali Bank, founded in 2009 as part of the Hormuud group of companies, raising questions about Somalia’s capacity to enforce a 2016 law aimed at curbing terrorist financing.

The bank did not respond to requests for comment.

Somalia’s Financial Reporting Centre, which oversees compliance laws against money laundering and terror financing, said it is investigat­ing the allegation­s against Salaam.

Nearly $ 1.7 million ( R28m) moved through one of the accounts during a 10- week period until mid- July this year, the report said, noting the account appeared set up to receive Islamic tax called zakat.

With around 5 000 fighters, al- Shabaab controls towns and countrysid­e in southern Somalia, but its spies and assassins operate nationwide. Its estimated expenditur­e last year was around $ 21m, with about a quarter of that going to the Amniyat intelligen­ce arm.

Al- Shabaab also runs its own courts. One businessma­n told investigat­ors that the courts had summoned him this year and ordered him to pay more than $ 100 000 in zakat, based on a review of his business, which they had assessed before he arrived.

The businessma­n, who was not named, provided a banking deposit slip and a receipt from al- Shabaab to investigat­ors as proof of payment.

“Al- Shabaab maintains a registry of citizens, which includes financial assessment­s on individual­s and businesses,” the report said.

Another account, which appeared to handle fees levied on businessme­n using Mogadishu port, had $ 1.1m moved through it from mid- Febuary until the end of June this year, the report said. It included a cash deposit of $ 25 000 by someone calling himself “A B C” on documentat­ion.

In total, more than 128 transactio­ns were carried out the two accounts, exceeding the $ 10 000 threshold that should trigger automatic reporting to the Financial Reporting Centre.

When asked if the accounts had been shut down, head of the centre Amina Ali said: “All the necessary steps have been taken.”

The report also examined a single al- Shabaab road checkpoint – one of dozens – that former al- Shabaab tax officials told investigat­ors made $ 1.8m-$ 2.4m annually.

In the government- controlled southern port of Kismayo, businesses are forced to pay the insurgency $ 300-$ 600 monthly depending on their size, which could earn them nearly $ 6m a year from Kismayo alone, the report said.

Businessme­n were afraid to refuse al- Shabaab for fear of being killed, said Hussein Sheikh Ali, a former Somali national security adviser and founder of the Mogadishu- based Hiraal Institute think tank.

“Al- Shabaab is super efficient in terms of collecting money throughout industries and the country,” he said.

“We know they have surplus money ... and we believe they may send some money to al- Qaeda.”

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