Somali Al-Shabaab leaders flee siege, impacted by defections
The terrorist Al-Shabaab movement in Somalia is witnessing a
state of collapse, as disputes and defections are impacting its leaders, while
the Somali army is intensifying its strikes against the al-Qaeda affiliate.
According to the Somalia National News Agency (SONNA), the
differences within Al-Shabaab resulted in the imposition of house arrest on
some of its prominent leaders in the far south of the country.
SONNA reported that Hassan Afgooye, a leader in the movement responsible for
finance who is currently in the city of Jilib in the Middle Juba region, is one
of the field commanders who fled to the south of the country, and the field
commander Farhan Kahii, who was in charge of the movement in the Galguduud
region in recent years, fled to Middle Juba.
The list of fugitives included the leader Nour Tiri, who
took refuge in the Barawa area of Lower Shabelle, and Ismail Osoble, who was
responsible for the assassinations and infiltrated into Middle Juba. Mualim
Jibu, who held several senior positions within the movement in the Bay and
Bakool regions, also fled to the far south, and the leader Musa Muhajir from
Mombasa, who was a commander in Kenya, disappeared in Middle Juba.
Army strikes disturb Al-Shabaab
Mohamed Ezz El-Din, a researcher on African affairs, said
that the successive military strikes and tribal resistance led to the mass
flight and surrender of many members of Al-Shabaab to the Somali army.
Ezz El-Din confirmed in an exclusive statement to the
Reference that Al-Shabaab suffers from a major defect in its movement's agenda,
pointing out that its leaders fled from the army forces, especially in the
south and center of the country.
He added that the members of Al-Shabaab fled as a result of
the severe financial crisis that the terrorist movement is experiencing due to
the government’s imposition of a siege on it, which caused an imbalance in the
movement.
Army and tribes confront terrorism
For his part, Dr. Abu al-Fadl El-Esnawi, a political affairs
researcher at the Al-Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies in Cairo,
said that the plan drawn up by Somali President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud,
specifically with Somali tribes or other countries to confront the movement,
will have great impacts on al-Shabaab.
Esnawi confirmed in an exclusive statement to the Reference
that the elements of the Al-Shabaab present in the outskirts of the country are
very weak compared to their counterparts in the central places, and it will be
easier for them to fall militarily against the Somali army forces. He added
that Al-Shabaab will not fall easily, but it will be exposed to multiple
crises.
He noted that Somali President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud has a
solid strategy to resist the movement, which he built on official and
unofficial confrontation with the use of the tribes, given their knowledge of
the entrances, strength and geography of the armed organization.
Esnawi explained that the Somali president was able to
formulate international coordination in the Horn of Africa with the aim of
besieging the movement inside and outside the country, which will have a strong
impact on Al-Shabaab's presence.