Somalia kills 7 in clash with group linked to Daesh
Soldiers allied to the Western-backed Somali government said they killed seven insurgents from a faction loyal to the Daesh group in a clash in northern Somalia on Saturday.
The soldiers from the semi-autonomous region of Puntland are part of a force headed to the port town of Qandala, which has been under the control of the insurgents since November.
The Puntland forces were attacked in the village of Bashaashin, which is 34 kilometres from Qandala.
“We killed seven Daesh and took their guns – now we are in the village,” Captain Mohamed Saiid, head of a Puntland military unit, told Reuters by satellite phone from the scene.
“The Daesh fighters retreated into a hill outside the village. Three soldiers were injured from our side. We shall keep on pursuing the fighters till we eliminate them from Qandala.”
The insurgents are thought to number in the low hundreds and are led by Abdiqadir Mumin, who broke away from the main Al Shabaab insurgency last year and swore allegiance to Daesh.
His group has no known operational links to Daesh in the Middle East and Qandala is the first town where they took control. A couple of days ago militants beheaded eight Somali village elders and killed at least seven other people during fighting spurred by a dispute over payment of an Islamic tax, a villager and a local official said on Wednesday.
Villagers in the semi-autonomous region of Galmadug in central Somalia also killed 10 militants during three days of fighting, the villager said, adding that Somali authorities had provided no help or support.