MOGADISHU (TF.SF) The executive council of Al-Shabaab militant group in southern Somalia are 85 members of Somalis and foreigners. 42 of that figure are Somalis while the rest are Al-Qaeda operatives from different outside countries as indicated in a year long investigation made by reporters from Radio Mogadishu.
The leader of the Al-Qaeda members fighting along side Al-Shabaab insurgent group in Somalia is Fazul Abdullah Mohamed of Comorous Islands as his deputy is Mohamed Faadil of Saudi Arabia while the head of the network's military operations was Khalid Al-Muhajir Al-Mustafa who was killed in the current ongoing fighting in Mogadishu between Al-Shabaab and the government troops backed by the African Union peacekeepers on 3 September 2010.
Foriegner Al-Qaeda fighters who escaped from thier origin countries and are still at large have a big influence in Al-Shabaab administration in Somalia and this may certainly create bigger security concern in the East Africa region.
The names, ranks and clans of the Somali executive members in Al-Shabaab are as here below:-
1. Ahmed Abdi Godane (Abu-Zubeyr), the leader of Al-Shabaab from Isaq clan of Arab sub-clan.
2. Ibrahim Haji Jama Meecaad Afkhani (Abu-Zalma), the first deputy leader of Al-Shabaab and in charge of finance, from Isaq clan of Sacad Muse sub-clan.
3. Mukhtar Robow Ali (Abu-Mansor), the second deputy leader of Al-Shabaab, from Rahanweyn clan of Leesaan sub-clan.
4. Fuad Mohamed Khalaf (Ina-Shangole), the head of public awareness of Al-Shabaab, from Darod clan of Awrtabe sub-clan.
5. Mukhtar Abu-Muslim, the head of Fatwas, from Darod clan of Ogaden sub-clan.
6. Khalif Mohamud Warsame (Khalif Cadale) the head of tracking down the NGO's, from Hawiye clan of Habar-Gidir, Ayr.
7. Madey Mamad Karatay, the head of destroying the graves, from Tuni clan.
8. Omar Mohamud Jimale (Matan), the head of security guards of Godane, from Hawiye clan of Duduble sub-clan.
9. Ali Muhumad Rage (Ali Dhere), the spokesman for Al-Shabaab, from Hawiye clan of Murursade sub-clan.
10. Abdulahi Timo Jilic, the head of technician for the weapons and salesman, from Hawiye clan of Murursade.
11. Hassan Afgooye, the especial servant for Godane, from Dir clan of Biyo-Maal.
12. Abdulahi Nadir, the interpretor for Godane, from Isaq clan of Toljecel sub-clan.
13. Hussein Ali Fidow (Hussein Daynile), the head of regions, from Hawiye clan of Murursade sub-clan.
14. Hassan Dhere, the head of the roped property, from Hawiye clan of Habar Gidir, Ayr sub-clan.
15. Hassan Afrah, the head of relationship with pirates, from Hawiye clan of Saleban sub-clan.
16. Mohamed Omar, the head of services and caring for the foreign fighters, from Darod clan of Ogaden sub-clan.
17. Bashir Qoorgaab, the commander of mortar brigade, from Hawiye clan of Habar gidir, Saleban sub-clan.
18. Ahmed Osoble, the police commander, from Hawiye clan of Hawadle sub-clan.
19. Mahad Karatey but known as (Sheik Burhan), the head of trainings, from Hawiye clan of Ayr sub-clan.
20. Ahmed Fifle, the head of finance, from Hawiye clan of Habargidir,Eyr sub-clan.
21. Hassan Turki, the father of Mujahideens and leader of Raskamboni brigades, from Darod clan of Ogaden sub-clan.
22. Mohamed Dulyaden, the contector of Raskamboni and Al-Shabaab, from Darod clan of Ogaden sub-clan.
23. Farhan Moahmed Kahiye, the head of defence, from Hawiye clan of Saleban sub-clan.
24. Abdulahi Hirane, the head of lower Shabelle region, from Dir clan of Biyo-maal sub-clan.
25. Dahir Gamaey but uses the name (Abdi Al-Haq), the judge of Al-Shabaab, from Hawiye clan of Duduble sub-clan.
26. Ali Muse, the treasure, from Hawiye clan of Habargidir, Faqashini sub-clan.
27. ali Mohamed Hussein, the head of Banadir province, from Hawiye clan of Abgal sub-clan.
28. Abdulahi Haji (Daud), the head of assasinations, from Hawiye clan of Murursade sub-clan.
29. Omar Faruk, the head of police in Banadir province, from Darod clan of Majerteen sub-clan.
30. Mohamed Balli, the head of the propogandas (the man who described Hawiye as infedals) from Darod clan of Majerten sub-clan.
31. Aden Oonbe, the head of social affairs, not known yet for his clan.
32. Farah Ali Hussein, the head of Dacwa in middle Shabelle region, from Hawiye clan of Abgal sub-clan.
33. Yusuf Kaba Kudukade, the head of Galgadud region, from Hawiye clan of Abgal sub-clan.
34. Abdiqani Kaba Jecel, the deputy mayor of lower Shabelle region, from Darod clan of Ogaden sub-clan.
35. Abdirahim Ali Mudey, the head of taxes for coil production, from Hawiye clan of Galjecel sub-clan.
36. Hassan Qodax, the head of militias in Gedo, from Darod clan of Marehan sub-clan.
37. Hussein Daqare, the head of Gedo region, from Darod clan of Marehan sub-clan.
38. Ali Roti, the man in charge of burying the children killed in the war, from Darod clan of Majerten sub-clan.
39. Abshir Ali Bukhari, the head of middle Shabelle region, from Darod clan of Ogaden sub-clan.
40. Yusuf Moalim Abdukadir, deputy leader, not known yet for his clan.
41. Mohamud Mohamed Nor (MMNOR), the deputy commander in chief for the invasions, from Isaq clan of Habarjeclo sub-clan.
42. Sahal Isku Dhuuq, the head of kidnappings of aid workers for ransom, from Darod clan of Ogaden sub-clan.
Source : Radio Mogadishu and TF.SF
Terror Free Somalia Foundation > Translate and Analysis Intelligence :from somali to English
These fighters are cowards and need to stop interfering in a free Somalia. Shabaab was against foreign interference by Ethiopian and African Union troops. Now they alone are responsible for bringing in foreign mercenaries/terrorists to kill innocent Somali citizens. Shabaab are hypocrites cowards.
ReplyDeleteAnnouncing a new FPRI conference and free live webcast. The Foreign Fighter Problem: Recent Trends and Case Studies
ReplyDeleteTo register for webcast only visit:
Day 1 Sept 27:
http://register.webcastgroup.com/l3/?wid=0700927105382
Day 2 Sept 28:
http://register.webcastgroup.com/l3/?wid=0700928105383
Date: Monday & Tuesday, September 27 & 28, 2010
Place: Reserve Officers Association
One Constitution Avenue NE
Washington, DC
On the battlefields of Iraq and Afghanistan, U.S. soldiers, sailors, airmen, and marines have confronted third-party national combatants. Known as "foreign fighters," these individuals have gained deadly skills and connections that can be exported or exploited to devastating effect in other locations. Over the past two decades, the foreign fighters phenomenon has grown after the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979 to the ethnically cleansed fields of the Balkans to Chechnya and beyond. But this is not a new problem. This conference builds upon the findings of the FPRI's first foreign fighters conference from the summer of
2009 and brings together recognized academic and analytical expertise in order examine recent trends in the foreign fighter phenomenon and also explore the particular cases of Somalia, the Maghreb, Yemen, and Afghanistan/Pakistan.
http://www.fpri.org/research/nationalsecurity/foreignfighters1009/
Agenda
Day 1 - Monday, September 27
8:00 AM: Conference Registration
8:45 AM: Conference Opening Remarks
9:00 AM: Keynote Address
Speaker: Terrance Ford, J2, United States African Command
9:45 AM: Break
10:00 AM: Panel 1: Recent Trends in Foreign Fighter Source Countries and Transit Networks
Panelist: Mohammed Hafez, Naval Postgraduate School (invited)
Panelist: Stephanie Kaplan, MIT
Panelist: Marc Sageman, FPRI
Panelist: Clinton Watts, Innovative Analytics and Training
Rapporteur & Moderator: Barak Mendelsohn, FPRI/Haverford College
12:00PM: Lunch
1:15 PM: Panel 2: Somalia Case Study
Paper: AMB (ret.) David Shinn, George Washington University
Panelist: Ted Dagne, Congressional Research Service
Panelist: Daveed Gartenstein-Ross, Foundation for the Defense of Democracies
Panelist: Ken Menkhaus, Davidson College
Moderator: Michael Noonan, FPRI
3:00 PM: Break
3:15 PM: Panel 3: Maghreb Case Study
Paper: J. Peter Pham, National Committee on American Foreign Policy/James Madison University
Panelist: Lianne Kennedy Boudali, RAND Corporation
Panelist: John Entelis, Fordham University
Panelist: Audra K. Grant, RAND Corporation
Moderator: Samuel Helfont, FPRI/Princeton University
Agenda
Day 2 - Tuesday, September 28
8:00 AM: Conference Registration
8:45 AM: Panel 4: Yemen Case Study
Paper: Christopher Boucek, Carnegie Endowment for Int'l Peace
Panelist: Brian O'Neill, Waq al-Waq blog
Panelist: Barak Salmoni, Washington Institute for Near East Policy
Panelist: Jeremy Sharp, Congressional Research Service
Moderator: Barak Mendelsohn, FPRI/Haverford College
10:30 AM: Break
10:45 AM: Panel 5: Afghanistan & Pakistan Case Study
Paper: Brian Glyn Williams, Univ. of Massachusetts-Dartmouth
Panelist: Sameer Lalwani, New America Foundation/MIT
Panelist: Bruce Riedel, Brookings Institution
Panelist: Stephen Tankel, Carnegie Endowment for Int'l Peace
Moderator: Michael Horowitz, FPRI/University of Pennsylvania
12:30 PM: Concluding Remarks