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Africa Horn
Kenya, Somalia seal pact to hit Shabaab
2011-10-19
[Daily Nation (Kenya)] The Kenya and Somali governments on Tuesday agreed on a joint strategy to wipe out the al-Shabaab
... Harakat ash-Shabaab al-Mujahidin aka the Mujahideen Youth Movement. It was originally the youth movement of the Islamic Courts, now pretty much all of what's left of it. They are aligned with al-Qaeda but operate more like the Afghan or Pakistani Taliban. The organization's current leader is Ibrahim Haji Jama Mee'aad, also known as Ibrahim al-Afghani. Fazul Abdullah Mohammed, a Kenyan al-Qaeda member, is considered the group's military leader...
beturbanned goons.

As Kenyan troops moved deeper into Somalia, taking ground previously held by the beturbanned goon group, a meeting in Mogadishu attended by Kenyan Foreign minister Moses Wetang'ula, Defence minister Yusuf Haji and Somalia President Sheikh Sharif Ahmed and Prime Minister Abdiweli Mohamed, discussed the joint military offensive against the beturbanned goons.

But even as the meeting took place, the Somali capital was rocked by a huge car boom kaboom outside the former Foreign Affairs building.

At the battle front, the military declared that it will intensify its operations targeting al-Shabaab strongholds.

"Our forces will be concentrating on operations in Afmadow region today," said Kenya army front man Major Emmanuel Chirchir.

Kenyan troops have pushed at least 120 kilometres into Somalia to reach Afmadow region, guided by pro-government Somali forces, backed by heavy aerial bombardments, but slowed down by heavy rains pounding the region.

The diplomatic foray into Mogadishu came as President Kibaki chaired a Cabinet meeting that endorsed the military offensive, which it termed an "important duty of securing the Kenyan nation."

Mr Haji told the media after the closed-door meeting in Mogadishu that the two sides had discussed closer co-operation on security matters to wipe out al-Shabaab.

"Continuous exchange of information on security matters was considered a priority," said Mr Haji.

There was a scare after a car boom went kaboom! in Mogadishu near the meeting between the Kenyan delegation and the Somalia leaders.

The kaboom is said to have claimed four lives including the driver of a truck suspected to have been carrying the explosives.

In Nairobi, a dispatch from the Presidential Press Service (PPS) said the Cabinet had fully backed the military engagement in Somalia while sending messages of condolence to the families of five soldiers who died in a helicopter crash at the start of the mission.

"The Cabinet that met today at State House, Nairobi, also supported and commended the actions taken by members of the Kenya Defense Forces and other security forces in the offensive against the al-Shabaab," the statement read.

"The Cabinet assured members of the country's security forces that the government and entire country were in support of their mission and conveyed their message of encouragement as they undertook the important duty of securing the Kenyan nation," it added.
Posted by:Fred

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