Senior Somali Islamist says shifting war to Kenya's capital
Thu May 22, 2014 3:00pm GMT
* Threatens attacks by teenage suicide bombers
* Kenya already reeling from blasts, shopping mall raid
* Al Shabaab's Fuad Mohamed Khalaf wanted by Washington
By Abdi Sheikh and Feisal Omar
MOGADISHU, May 22 (Reuters) - A senior Somali Islamist commander said his
group had moved its holy war to Kenya's capital, threatening to launch
attacks by teenage suicide bombers on a city already reeling from bomb
blasts and a deadly militant assault on a shopping mall.
Somalia's al Shabaab group has declared war on its neighbour before, but
Fuad Mohamed Khalaf's comments suggested an escalation in a campaign that
has piled pressure on the Kenyan government and alarmed regional and global
powers.
"We have transferred the war to inside Nairobi," Khalaf, one of al Shabaab's
most senior officials, said in a speech posted on the Somali website
www.somalimemo.net.
"Kenyans, wait for Muslim teenage suicide bombers, explosions and battles,"
said Khalaf, a Somali-Swedish national wanted by the United States. He
called on Muslims in Kenya to join the offensive.
The was no immediate reaction from government officials in the capital of
east Africa's largest economy.
The al Qaeda-linked group, which has fought a bloody seven year campaign to
impose its interpretation of Islamic law inside Somalia, has said it wants
to take revenge for Kenya's deployment of troops in the Horn of Africa
nation.
Back-to-back explosions killed at least 10 people in a packed Nairobi market
on Friday last week, though no one immediately claimed responsibility.
The blasts came a day after Kenya rebuked Britain, the United States, France
and Australia for issuing travel warnings. Hundreds of tourists have left
resorts on the Indian Ocean coast ahead of schedule as a result.
Al Shabaab claimed responsibility for a raid on Nairobi's Westgate shopping
mall in September that killed at least 67 people.
Kenya's government has defended the efforts of its security services and
said it has foiled other plots.
On Monday, Kenyan security officials said suspected al Shabaab militants
killed at least 12 people in an ambush in northern Kenya, a day after Kenyan
jets pounded the Islamists' bases over the border.
Kenya's minority Muslim population in the capital and on the coast has been
a fertile recruitment ground for al Shabaab where many youths feel abandoned
by a predominantly Christian government.
The United States has offered a $5 million bounty for information leading to
the location of Khalaf. (Reporting by Abdi Sheikh and Feisal Omar; Writing
by George Obulutsa; Editing by Richard Lough and Andrew Heavens)