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Somalia's Al-Shabaab chief say war 'shifting to Kenya'

Thursday May 22 2014
KDF

A Kenya Defence Forces (KDF) armoured personnel carrier patrols Mandera town on June 1, 2013, which is prone to terror attacks. Photo/FILE

Somalia's Al-Qaeda linked Al-Shabaab vowed Thursday to move their war to neighbouring Kenya, one of the top commanders said in broadcast urging fighters to launch attacks.

"The war will be shifting to Kenya, if they kill a Somali girl we kill a Kenyan girl," Fuad Mohamed Khalaf, one of the Al-Shabaab's most senior commanders, said in a radio broadcast.

"We are urging all the Muslims in Kenya... to fight the government of Kenya inside that country, because Kenyans killed your people including children," Khalaf said in a speech broadcast on the Al-Shabaab's Radio Andalus.

Kenyan troops crossed into southern Somalia in 2011 to fight the Al-Shabaab, later joining the now 22,000-strong UN-mandated African Union force battling the Islamists.

Fighter jets, believed to be from Kenya, have struck Al-Shabaab strongholds this week, as part of the latest push by the AU force against the insurgents.

"When their soldiers and war planes kill your people, God permits you to retaliate accordingly, we will fight the Kenyans," Khalf said, viewed as second in importance only to Al-Shabaab chief Ahmed Abdi Godane.

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Al-Shabaab, who claimed responsibility for the September 2013 attack on Nairobi's Westgate mall in which at least 67 people were killed, have also been blamed for a string of grenade blasts and killings.

Last week a double bomb attack in a Nairobi market left 10 people dead and scores wounded, while the United States has said it was preparing to cut staff levels in Kenya because of the mounting threat of attacks.

The Al-Shabaab said it was their guerrillas who carried out a deadly ambush on an army convoy in Kenya's northeastern Mandera region on Monday, close to the border with Somalia.

Khalaf said the Al-Shabaab had trained fighters and vowed more would be sent to carry out attacks inside Kenya.

"We have trained the people... they are the ones who carried out the Mandera attack," he said. "More are going to be sent soon."

The United States have offered a $5 million bounty for Khalaf, who holds both Somali and Swedish nationality.

Khalaf, who the US says is both a Al-Shabaab military commander and key fundraiser, reportedly spent over a decade in the Swedish capital Stockholm.

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