Somali clans are revolting against jihadists
Gains against al-Shabab are a boost for Somalia’s new government
Muktar Robow, once a feared leader of al-Shabab, al-Qaeda’s richest and most lethal affiliate, jabs his finger at a map of Somalia. Now a cabinet minister, he rattles off the names of places that have recently been recaptured from his erstwhile comrades. The lands of the Hawadle clan in Hiran, central Somalia? “They’ve liberated all of it.” Almost all of the region’s key roads are also under government control. The next districts to be liberated will probably be Galguduud and Middle Shabelle (see map). And the rest of Somalia? “Al-Shabab is on the back foot,” answers the former terrorist who once had a $5m American bounty on his head. “Gains are being made every day.”
This article appeared in the Middle East & Africa section of the print edition under the headline “Rise of the clans”
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