Africa

Hundreds rally against al-Shabab in Somali capital Mogadishu

 Hundreds of people in the Somali capital, Mogadishu, attended a government-organised rally on Thursday to protest against the al-Qaeda-linked al-Shabab group.

Somalia’s President, Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, who was part of the rally at a stadium under tight security, used the event to call on Somalis to help flush out members of the al-Shabab group he described as “bedbugs”.

“I’m calling to you, the people of Mogadishu, the Kharijites (renegades) are amongst you … so flush them out.

They are in your houses, they are your neighbours, in cars that pass you by,” Mohamud said on Thursday, addressing the large crowd which was one of the largest public gatherings in recent years.

“I want us to commit today to flushing them out. They are like bedbugs under our clothes,” he added, as demonstrators waved flags and placards with anti-al-Shabab messages.

“We will never accept extrem­ist killing or robbing our people and we will also never accept the killing of our innocent people.

We will protect them from al-Shabab.

Anyone who does that (kills innocent people) will face trial or justice,” Mohamud said.

“The people are tired of massacres, killings, and all kinds of misdeeds and they are now saying to al-Shabab: ‘Enough is enough’”, he said.

His government has also urged citizens to report on fighters living among them.

Hodan Ali, a senior adviser to the Somali president, told Al Jazeera that it “was about time the citizens rise up and claim their own security, backed by the government, and we are seeing across the country a swell against al-Shabab”.

Al-Shabab has been waging a bloody uprising against the inter­nationally-backed central gov­ernment since 2007, carrying out attacks in Somalia and neighbour­ing countries, which sent troops to help in the fight against the armed group.

The group killed 166 people at Garissa University in 2015, and 67 at a mall in Nairobi in 2013, but the frequency and severity of al-Shabab attacks in Kenya has reduced in recent years. – Aljazeera

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