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[dehai-news] (Reuters): Somali militants brand new president a "traitor"

From: Berhane Habtemariam <Berhane.Habtemariam_at_gmx.de_at_dehai.org>
Date: Tue, 11 Sep 2012 23:36:19 +0200

Somali militants brand new president a "traitor"


Tue Sep 11, 2012 4:28pm GMT

* Rebels say new president serves West

* Officials say militants will be defeated

By Yara Bayoumy

MOGADISHU, Sept 11 (Reuters) - Islamist rebels on Tuesday dismissed
Somalia's presidential election as a ploy by the West to boost its economic
and strategic interests in the country.

They branded the new leader, Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, a traitor and said they
would keep up their war to make Somalia a strict Islamic state.

Somalian lawmakers on Monday elected political newcomer Mohamud as president
in the most inclusive election in the country in years, ousting Sheikh
Sharif Ahmed.

Among the former academic's priorities will be to crush the militant al
Shabaab group, who have fought for five years in an insurgency that has
killed thousands of people but is now under pressure from regional military
forces.

Al Shabaab spokesman Sheikh Ali Mahmud Rage said the group did not regard
the election as being in the Somali people's interests.

"They represent Western interests, and interests of their agents in the
region," he said in a statement.

"The so-called election came to maintain the status quo, allowing foreign
companies to steal Somalia's resources and to destroy its economy. Sharif's
replacement is nothing more than a revised edition of traitors serving those
interests."

The statement did not spell out where the West's interests lay but there is
growing international interest in Somalia's oil and gas potential. Illegal
fishing by foreign trawlers in Somali waters also angers many Somalis.

The Horn of Africa country is also a battleground in the U.S.-led war
against militant Islam and a threat to regional stability.

Rage urged Somalis to support the militants' Holy War and said the fight
would go on until its own strict interpretation of Sharia law was imposed
nationwide.

"We will continue to fight these apostates as we have been fighting them
before," he said.

MILITANTS DEFEATED

In the past 13 months, al Shabaab has lost strongholds across southern and
central Somalia in the face of advances by an African Union peacekeeping
force, as well as Kenyan and Ethiopian forces deployed inside Somalia.

The regional allies now have their sights trained on the southern port city
of Kismayu, base for al Shabaab's operations.

Senior African Union official Wafula Wamunyinyi said the militants had no
chance of keeping Kismayu.

"Whether they concentrate forces there or not, they'll be defeated. Al
Shabaab do not have a chance to survive beyond this transition," he told
reporters in the Somali capital Mogadishu.

Many of the group's foreign fighters were fleeing Somalia, he added.

"They've been moving to Yemen, according to sources. Some of them (are)
crossing into Kenya," Wamunyinyi said.

Western officials have hailed the presidential vote, the first of its kind
in Somalia in 45 years, saying it showed Somalis were ready to break away
from the endless bloodshed and endemic corruption that has plagued the
country for decades.

"It's really extraordinary that despite all the pressures, despite all the
benefits of incumbency that the outgoing leaders had, they performed very
poorly and this was an outright victory by this new leader," U.N. Special
Envoy for Somalia, Augustine Mahiga, told reporters before his first meeting
with Mohamud.

"And that speaks volumes for the wishes of the Somali people." (Additional
reporting by Richard Lough in Nairobi; Writing by Richard Lough; Editing by
Angus MacSwan)

C Thomson Reuters 2012 All rights reserved

 
Received on Tue Sep 11 2012 - 21:36:40 EDT
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