Skip to content

Al-Shabab praise the attack at Charlie Hebdo

Storyline:National News

 Al-Shabab praised the massacre at Charlie Hebdo the satirical weekly in Paris as a “heroic” act.

“They made millions of Muslims happy by taking action. Some misguided people claim that freedom of expression was attacked, but that is not the case, and the two heroic people acted accordingly,” Radio Andalus, the official mouthpiece of the militants, said in a commentary.

“They cut the head of non-believers who insulted our beloved prophet,” the radio said, adding that Osama Bin Laden had “told the West that if freedom of expression has no limit, then you have to expect your blood to be shed.”

It said the satirical magazine had “insulted our prophet and annoyed millions of Muslims,” and described the attackers as “our two brothers (who) were the first to take revenge.”

Al-Shabab, who control large areas of rural Somalia,

Al-Shabab were also linked to Mohamed Geele, a Somali man who was convicted of a 2010 axe attack against Danish cartoonist Kurt Westergaard, who had faced numerous death threats since his caricature of the Muslim prophet Mohammad appeared in the Danish daily Jyllands-Posten in 2005.

Geele is serving a 10-year sentence for the attack.

The group were finally driven from fixed positions in Mogadishu in 2011, and have lost several strongholds in the south and center of the country in a recent offensive by the African Union’s AMISOM force, which is fighting in support of Somalia’s internationally-backed government.

The group, however, still controls large parts of the south and center rurals of the country, and have expanded their reach with a string of major attacks in neighboring Kenya – including the September 2013 siege of the Westgate shopping mall in Nairobi that left at least 67 dead.

Source: dailystar.com