The Somaliland government is now accusing terrorist group Al Shabab of leading attacks on its forces in the latest fighting in Las Anod.
In a statement from the Presidency, Somaliland government cited the attack which occured on 26th March saying the Somaliland National Army positions were at their camp in Goljacade, outside the town of Laascaanood in Sool region when they came under sustained and heavy attack by three groups of invading forces operating from bases in Bossaasso, Galkayo, Qardho, and Garowe in Puntland and from an Al Shabab base at Buhoodleh on the border with Ethiopia.
The stament said the attackers were comprised of fighters from the terrorist group Al Shabab, members of the Puntland Security Forces and Puntland Presidential Guard, and former soldiers from Somalia’s Armed Forces, all of whom have been photographed and filmed fighting at locations inside Somaliland.
“Once again this was an unprovoked attack launched in contravention of the unilateral ceasefire declared by Somaliland on 10 February 2023,” said the statement.
The government says the Somaliland National Army offered a robust and successful defence and inflicted casualties to terrorists. However, as shown in this drone footage https://youtu.be/QDjK1ze06WE the Somaliland Army refrained shooting at hundreds of defeated militia and allowed them run away by by foot.
“As on previous occasions, to minimise risk to the lives of civilians, the Somaliland National Army resisted attempts by the attackers to draw it into civilian inhabited areas and no civilian casualties have been reported by the Somaliland authorities.”
According to the government, the latest incident marks an escalation in the ongoing conflict being waged inside Somaliland by Al Shabab terrorists with support from a weak coalition of other external anti-Somaliland elements.
“The assault is a continuation of the long-term strategy being pursued by Al Shabab to destroy democracy and peace in Somaliland, disrupt operations and international shipping at the port of Berbera, and infiltrate and destabilise the neighboring countries of Ethiopia and Djibouti with the ambition of bring insecurity to the entire region.”
The government says that as was the case when Al Shabab rose to prominence in Mogadishu, their policy for gaining control of Laascaanood and the Sool region has been to first disrupt the area with a serious of planned assassinations targeting politicians, local government and military officials, intelligence officers, judges, businessmen who refused to pay Al-Shabab taxes, journalists, and supporters of Somaliland.
It said the Al Shabab has successfully exploited local grievances with the government of Somaliland. Once these objectives were achieved, they have then commenced to assume control of the situation and install their own system of governance. Evidence of Al Shabab having already taken control of Laascaanood is emerging with the banning of the use of qat and the destruction of all outlets used for its sale. They have also begun forcing the inhabitants to pray and restricting the behaviour of women.
“Over the past months and years further evidence of the scale of the threat posed to the region by Al Shabab has emerged. In addition to frequent public appearances by their leader, Abdi Madobe, who as recently as on the 26th of March was filmed participating in fighting against Somaliland, and who in the past has been filmed proclaiming Jihad and death to the people of Somaliland and their Western allies, several other well-known Al Shabab leaders have been identified as being active in Sool region.
“There have also been numerous arrests made by Somaliland security forces of Al Shabab members operating inside Somaliland. A number of suspects are awaiting trial in Somaliland, but many more have been tried and convicted and are serving sentences for acts of terrorism, including the targeted assassinations in Laascaanood which preceded the current conflict.”
The statement named former high-ranking officers and officials who until recently served in the Federal Government of Somalia (FGS) of being involved on the attacks.
“The most conspicuous of these are General Abdi Hassan Mohamed Hijaar, a former General of FGS police force, and General Abdihamiid Mahamoud Dirir, a former admiral of the FGS navy who towards the end of last year was dismissed from his position. Both men have been seen operating in Laascaanood commanding soldiers who were previously members of FGS army units that were created under the Farmajo government and trained by the Turks and USA to become an elite force designed to tackle Al Shabab.
The Somaliland government said the indivuiduals have been termend by the government of Hassan Sheikh has described them as deserters.
“Also present is Abdullahi Ali Hersi, a second deputy of the upper house of FGS, who has been pictured recently on social media participating in activities inside Laascaanood and Abdillahi Bidhan Warsame, who is currently a member of parliament in the FGS. Evidence of these men acting alongside members of Al Shabab and their involvement in the illegal invasion of Somaliland has been handed to the United Nations security council.”
“The international community has long fought to eliminate Al Shabab. However, it is notable that during the campaign to eradicate them all the considerable resources made available for this purpose have been received by the Federal Government of Somalia and, to a lesser extent, the administration in Puntland.”
” It should also be noted that elements of the PSF forces now fighting alongside Al Shabab in Sool were originally trained and equipped by the USA to fight against Al Shabab. No support from the international community for the prevention of terrorism has ever been extended to Somaliland. Yet it remains the case that, since 2008, with the sole assistance of Ethiopia, the government of Somaliland has so far succeeded in holding Al Shabab at bay.”
“Now, as the conflict escalates and the forces ranged against Somaliland increase, the situation is becoming more serious, not just for Somaliland, but for the security and stability of the wider region. In response to this escalation in the quantity and ferocity of the attacks being waged against it, on the 27th of March, the Somaliland Army announced that it will no longer pursue a purely defensive stance against the invasion of its territory. Henceforth Somaliland will actively repel hostile forces from its territories, seek to defend the democracy which it has upheld for the past thirty-two years and act to reinstate the rule of law throughout its lands.”
The government of Somaliland therefore urgently calls upon the international community not to fall for the sophisticated web of lies and propaganda being disseminated by those opposed to Somaliland, but to understand and acknowledge the true severity of the situation in Sool. The international community must then act in support of Somaliland to combat the extreme threat that Al Shabab terrorism poses, not just to the democracy and prosperity of the Republic of Somaliland, but to its allies and neighbours in Ethiopia and Djibouti, and the civilian population caught up in this unprovoked and tragic conflict.