- Mohamed Said Atom
-
Mohamed Said Atom
محمد سعيد اتومBorn 1966[1]
Galgala, SomaliaEthnicity Somali Occupation Islamist, warlord, arms-smuggler Religion Islam Mohamed Said Atom (Somali: Sheekh Maxamed Sayid Atom, Arabic: محمد سعيد اتوم), alternatively Sheikh Mohamed Said Atom, is a Somali arms-smuggler, warlord and Al-Shabaab commander.[2][3]
Contents
Al-Shabaab operative
An arms-smuggler on both U.S. and U.N. security watch-lists,[3][4] Atom has been tied to the Al-Qaeda-linked Al-Shabaab group of Islamist militants that is waging war against Somalia's Transitional Federal Government. According to a 2008 United Nations Monitoring Group report, he is “aligned with al-Shabaab and may take instructions from Shabaab leader Fu’ad Muhammad Khalaf ‘Shangole.’”[5][6]
Galgala conflict
In 2010, Atom's militia was stationed in Galgala in Puntland. That same year, he declared war on the autonomous region's administration, announcing on July 28 that: We are members of the Shabab, and the Shabab are members of us. We have good contacts. We are united in our objectives.[7]
On August 8, 2010, Puntland security forces launched an offensive against Atom's militants, who were hiding out in the Galgala hills. Atom had fled just before the attack that left more than 100 militants dead,[3] having reportedly misled his men prior to the Puntland army's offensive by promising reinforcements from Al-Shabaab via the town of Burao in the Somaliland region.[3] By late October, Puntland military personnel had seized the last insurgent outposts.[8]
On May 11, 2011, fighting flared up again in the Galgala hills, as militants loyal to Atom attempted to ambush Puntland soldiers in an early morning raid.[9][10] Five Puntland troops were reportedly killed and four were wounded in the ensuing battle, while at least 21 of the Al-Shabaab-affiliated militiamen were slain. The remaining militants fled to their mountain hideouts, with Puntland army personnel conducting military operations in pursuit.[9]
Somaliland tie allegations
In October 2010, Garowe Online reported that Atom was hiding out in Somaliland after being pursued by the neighboring Puntland region's authorities for his role in targeted assassination attempts against Puntland officials as well as bomb plots.[3][4] Several of Atom's followers were also reportedly receiving medical attention in the region, after having been wounded in a counter-terrorism raid in the Galgala hills by Puntland security personnel.[3] According to Puntland government documents, the Somaliland region's Riyale government in 2006 both financed and offered military assistance to Atom's men as part of a campaign to destabilize the autonomous territory via proxy agents and to distract attention away from the Somaliland government's own attempts at occupying the disputed Sool province. The Puntland Intelligence Agency (PIA) also alleged that over 70 salaried Somaliland soldiers had fought alongside Atom's militiamen during the Galgala operation, including one known Somaliland intelligence official who died in the ensuing battle.[4][11] In January 2011, the Puntland government issued a press release accusing the incumbent Somaliland administration of providing a safe haven for Atom and of attempting to revive remnants of his militia.[12] The Somaliland authorities, which had earlier described Atom as a "terrorist",[13] strenuously denied all of the charges, dismissing them as "baseless" and intended to divert attention away from Puntland's attempt to establish what it described as a "large army".[14] In January 2011, the Hargeisa-based broadsheet Haatuf also published an interview wherein a representative of Atom's denied that his group was affiliated with Al-Shabaab and requested military assistance from the Somaliland administration.[13] In May 2011 Puntland's governor of Sanaag region Mohamoud Said Nur claimed that Somaliland is behind the renewed fighting in Galgala.[15]
References
- ^ "Security Council Committee on Somalia and Eritrea Issues List of Individuals". http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2010/sc9904.doc.htm. Retrieved 2011-05-21.
- ^ Ibrahim, Mohammed (2010-08-09). "Government Forces Fight Militants in Northeast Somalia". New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/10/world/africa/10somalia.html. Retrieved 2011-04-07.
- ^ a b c d e f Garowe Online. "Somalia: Al Shabaab rebel Atom 'hiding in Somaliland': Report". http://www.garoweonline.com/artman2/publish/Somalia_27/Somali_Al_Shabaab_member_Atom_hiding_in_Somaliland_Report.shtml. Retrieved April 07, 2011.
- ^ a b c Somalia: '70 Somaliland soldiers fought alongside Al Shabaab in Galgala': Puntland
- ^ Militant Leadership Monitor - Personalities Behind the Insurgency
- ^ "Security Council Committee on Somalia and Eritrea Issues List of Individuals". http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2010/sc9904.doc.htm. Retrieved 2011-05-21.
- ^ The New York Times (2010-07-28). "Militant Alliance Adds to Somalia’s Turmoil". http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/29/world/africa/29somalia.html?_r=1. Retrieved April 07, 2011.
- ^ Somalia: Troops seize 'last insurgent outpost' in Galgala: Puntland general
- ^ a b Somalia: Puntland Government Forces Kill 21 Al Shabaab Militants
- ^ Somali Islamists seize town near port in Puntland
- ^ Somalia: Somaliland is becoming Africa's 'terrorism secret' [Editorial]
- ^ Somalia: Puntland is Deeply Concerned About Somaliland’s Growing Ties to Al Shabaab [Press Release]
- ^ a b Somalia: Haatuf newspaper reports Somaliland link with Al Shabaab
- ^ Somaliland says Shabaab ties claim a smokescreen
- ^ http://shabelle.net/article.php?id=6686
Categories:- Somalian people stubs
- Somali warlords
- Somalian Islamists
- Living people
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