Renewed fears over the Somali Al-Shabab Terrorist links with Al Qaeda Yemen and an attack on the home of a Danish cartoonist attempted murder by an axe-wielding man with reported ties to the insurgents have turned a spotlight on the Islamist group. Here are some questions and answers about the Al-Shabaab Terrorist hardline guerrillas and their international reach:WHY DO WE CARE NOW?Western security agencies have long said that Somalia is a safe haven for foreign militants plotting attacks across the region and beyond. But until recently, the focus has mostly been on preventing Somalis abroad becoming radicalised then returning to join the rebels and fight the United Nations (UN)-backed government.There have been several cases of this, including, reportedly, the suicide bombers who Targeting Graduating Doctors TF.SF Exclusive ceremony in Mogadishu on December 3, and last September at the heart of the African Union's (AU) main military base in the capital.Somali officials said that the bomber who killed 22 people, including three government ministers, at the graduation was a 26-year-old Danish citizen of Somali descent. One of the AU base bombers Terrorist Cumar Maxamed Maxamuud was reportedly American from Seattle, while about 20 young men are also said to have disappeared from Minneapolis's Minnesota large Somali community in the last two years to join al Shabaab.Experts say that such individuals are more willing and motivated than native Somalis A to stage suicide attacks - perhaps because of their experiences of living in the West and the problems that this may have caused them in terms of their own identity.But al Shabaab's external reach has been highlighted after Friday's attack on cartoonist Kurt Westergaard in Copenhagen - as well as its pledge to support Yemeni insurgents linked to al Qaeda who are believed to be behind the foiled Christmas Day terror plot bombing of a commercial airliner over Detroit airport
WHAT IS AL SHABAAB'S RECORD?
The rebels have threatened in the past to launch attacks in neighbouring Kenya and Ethiopia, as well in Uganda and Burundi, which both sent troops for the African Union's (AU's) peacekeeping mission AMISOM.But they have so far failed to follow through. Experts believe some al Shabaab Terrorist Financiers have large amounts of funds in real estate in Nairobi - meaning that they would not want to see any attacks that put their investment at risk. Some analysts suggest the absence of any strikes in Kampala or Bujumbura suggests that much of the rebels' rhetoric maybe just that.That has not stopped concerns being stoked further afield, however. Last August, police in Australia said they had foiled a suicide attack on an army base there by four men with al Shabaab links in that country's biggest terrorism case.Then Danish police said the 28-year-old who broke into Westergaard's house had links to al-shabaab Terrorist and al Qaeda and that the attempted killing was "terror related".The group's ties to Yemen have also come under close scrutiny given Washington's renewed security focus on the Arab world's poorest nation following the foiled December 25 attack.Regional analysts say that there has long been a degree of cooperation between people-trafficking gangs and other organised criminals on both sides of the Gulf of Aden, but that the extent of any other links remains unclear.On Saturday, Somalia's defence minister told Reuters that al Qaeda insurgents in Yemen had sent two boat loads of weaponry to al Shabaab fighters in the rebel-held southern port of Kismayu in recent days, but gave few other details.
WHAT IS AL SHABAAB SAYING?
Veteran al Shabaab commanders declined to speak to Reuters on the record about the group's global connections, but a senior rebel official who agreed to talk on condition of anonymity said they received help from many individuals in Islamic nations who supported their struggle to impose sharia law across Somalia.The official said jihadists from across the Muslim world had joined them, including high profile al Qaeda suspects like Fazul Abdullah Mohammed,Al Qaeda Leader in East Africa indicted for his alleged role in the 1998 Kenya and Tanzania US embassy bombings that killed 240 people.Asked about a report that Fazul, a Comorian in his late 30s with a $5-million reward on his head, was now leading the group, the official said he would not answer because he was protecting his fellow mujahideen from the Western nations hunting him.Most Somalis said they believed Terrorist Abdi Godane also named Sheik Mokhtar Abu-Zubeyr aka Mukhtaar C/raxmaan remained al Shabaab's leader. He has not been seen in public for months, but sends audio recordings to local media. He is believed to be in close contact with the senior foreign members of al Shabaab.No one knows for sure, but experts say a reasonable estimate of al Shabaab's total manpower is no more than 5 000, with perhaps 500-plus foreigners. A regional analyst said Yemenis made up a significant portion of the foreign element.Other foreigners in al Shabaab's ranks reportedly include white Americans and Canada's Europeans, Kenyans, Sudanese, Indian Ocean islanders, Pakistanis and Algerians. Al-Shabab Terrorist says they will attack Israel
What is the global reach of Somalia's rebels?
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