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Issue 532/ 7th - 13th Apr 2012

Front Page

Somaliland News

News Headlines

TELESOM Announces Reduction In Phone Call Costs

Djibouti To Deport Four French Nationals

Al-Shabaab Leadership Disputes Continue

Local and Regional Affairs

Fourth Somali Journalist Killed Since Year Began

Two-Thirds Of Young Arab Women Remain Out Of Workforce

Al Shabaab At War With Itself

Somali Pirate Activity Reaches 15-Month High

TFG Fears 'Backlash' Against Somalis In Kenya

Al-Shabaab Bans Livestock Sale To Kenya

East Africa May Get Below-Normal Rain, Threatening Food Security

Editorial

The Perils Of Exaggerating

Features & Commentary

Can Azawad Win International Recognition?

New Al-Shabaab Terrorist Attack in Mogadishu Won't Derail Somalia's Recovery

Found: A Somalia We Do Not Know

A Failed State?

Collateral Damage

International News

Opinion

Somalia: Will The International Community Ever Stop Believing The TFG?

The Government Of Somaliland Throws A Humanitarian Lifeline To Somali Pirates And Their Families

We're Winning This Fight

Calling A Spade A Spade - Part 6

Al-Qaida Seeks To Regroup In Africa, Think Tank Says

London, UK, April 7, 2012 – A weakened Al-Qaida is seeking to regroup and re-energize by linking up with established Islamist movements in Africa, a new report from Britain's Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) said Wednesday.

Deprived of its base in Afghanistan, Osama Bin Laden's terror network appears to be seeking influence in Somalia, North Africa and beyond, raising the prospect of a new "arc of regional instability", the study said.

"The focus of anti-jihadist counter-terrorism is shifting to Africa," wrote Valentina Soria, a research analyst at the RUSI defense think-tank.

Her report details "disturbing new trends" across the continent which pose fresh challenges for Western countries such as Britain and the United States, whose citizens may be increasingly targeted in Africa and which could even be attacked themselves, although there is no public evidence of this so far.

"If correct, this assessment would raise the worrying prospect of an arc of regional instability encompassing the whole Sahara-Sahel strip and extending through to East Africa, which the now weakened Al-Qaida-core could well exploit to re-group, re-organize and re-invigorate its terrorist campaign against the West," the report said.

Using a tested model from Yemen, the home of Al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, the network has forged alliances with the Shabaab movement in Somalia and Al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb in North Africa.

Meanwhile, Nigeria's Boko Haram, while remaining separate and focused on local issues, has shifted towards more spectacular attacks reminiscent of Al-Qaida, the report said.

Al-Qaida "appears to be adopting a strategy of 'going native,' which implies seizing upon and exploiting local grievances with the ultimate aim of securing a stable foothold in volatile countries," the report said.

The African groups benefit from Al-Qaida's expertise to plan and carry out high-profile attacks and to disseminate propaganda, as well as physical support in the form of fighters, finances and weapons.

However, the report said the decision to link up with Bin Laden's group could cause internal divisions and also scare off potential recruits, noting that Shabaab’s reliance on foreign fighters may not be a choice but a necessity driven by the alienation of the Somali movement's African supporters.

Source: AFP




 





 


 



 



 

 


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