- Source: Fuad Qalaf
Fuad Mohamed Qalaf (Somali: Fu'aad Maxamed Khalaf, Arabic: فؤاد محمد خلف; born 28 March 1965), also known as Fuad Shangole, is a Somali-Swedish militant who is a senior member of Al-Shabaab.
Working as a cleric in Sweden during the 90s and early 2000s, he returned to Somalia in 2004 and eventually became a senior figure within the Islamic Courts Union (ICU). Following the collapse of the ICU during the Ethiopian invasion of 2006 he fled Somalia but returned to become a top official within Al-Shabaab. Qalaf was the first senior Al-Shabaab official to publicly criticize the groups leader Ahmed Abdi Godane. In 2012, the United States government put out a bounty on Qalaf.
Presently he holds a seat on Al-Shabaab's Shura Council and is believed to head the groups operations in Puntland state. He helped lead al-Shabaab's invasion of Ethiopia during 2022.
Biography
Born in Mogadishu, Qalaf came to Sweden as an asylum seeker in 1992 and later received Swedish citizenship. Qalaf comes from the Harti sub-clan of the wider Darod. He lived in Sweden for twelve years, most of the time preaching as an Imam at mosque in the Rinkeby district in Stockholm (Swedish: Rinkebymoskén). As such, he worked to influence young Muslims about Jihad. He was openly sympathetic towards al-Qaeda and collected money towards financing the Islamic Courts Union in Somalia as well as recruiting youth to both the Islamic Courts Union and later also to al-Shabaab. He was also a prolific lecturer at the Bellevue Mosque in Gothenburg.
In 2004, Qalaf returned to Somalia together with his family during the rise of the Islamic Courts Union. Following the conquest of Mogadishu in mid-2006, Qalaf went on to serve in the Department of Education under the newly formed ICU-government. After the Ethiopian invasion of Somalia in December 2006 and the subsequent fall of the ICU-government, Qalaf and other ICU leaders fled the country. In April 2007 he was reported to be living in Kenya. Qalaf returned to Somalia again during 2007/2008 to be a prominent leader in Al-Shabaab. He was alleged to be behind the killing of Aisha Duhulow in Kismayo during late 2008. In 2010 he was the target of two different assassination attempts. Hizbul Islam, an Islamist group then rivaling Al-Shabaab, reportedly targeted him with a road side bomb in February of that year. In May he was targeted by unknown assailants in the Bakaara Market of Mogadishu. By the end of 2010, Qalaf became the first senior figure in the organization publicly criticized the leader of Al-Shabaab, Ahmed Godane, for having “hidden agendas,” after the Al-Shabaab attacked Hizbul Islam forces. Qalaf increasingly split with Godane due to attacks he carried out on Hizbul Islam while its leader, Hassan Dahir Aweys, was negotiating with Al-Shabaab. Godane opposed a Hizbul Islam/Al-Shabaab merger, while Qalaf supported it.
By 2011, Qalaf had risen to become the leader of the groups operations in Puntland. That year he also publicly described suicide bombing as unlawful and began adopting a more conciliatory tone towards the TFG. He warned Al-Shabaab fighters to stop assassinating people 'on mere suspicion of working for the government' as it was a great sin. During a speech in Mogadishu during January 2011, Qalaf stated that TFG would potentially be able to lead the country, in accordance with sharia (Islamic law), together with Al Shabab.
During June 2012, the United States government put out its first bounty on Qalaf. He publicly stated that year that Al-Shabaab would stop 'caning' people for perceived transgressions against sharia. In May 2013, Fuad Qalaf confirmed that al Shabaab had killed American jihadist Omar Hammami (aka Abu Mansoor Al-Amriki) and several other foreign fighters in Bay region. In May 2014, Qalaf stated that al-Shabab fighters would carry out jihad, or holy war, in Kenya and Uganda "and afterward, with God's will, to America."
In 2021 the United States government put a $6 million dollar bounty for information that could lead to Qalafs capture. Following al-Shabaab's 2022 invasion into Ethiopia, Major General Tesfaye Ayalew of the Ethiopian National Defence Force (ENDF) claimed to have killed Qalaf in an airstrike on 29 July 2022. On 3 August Al Shabaab released a voice recording of Qalaf, who denied Ethiopian forces killed him on July 29. He further stated that al Shabaab would continue to attack the Somali Regional Liyu police.
See Also
Ali Mohamed Rage
Mukthar Robow
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Fuad Qalaf
- Ahmad Diriye
- American military intervention in Somalia (2007–present)
- 2022 al-Shabaab invasion of Ethiopia
- Somali Civil War (2009–present)
- Inspire (magazine)
- Awrtable
- May 2010 Mogadishu bombings
- Ali Yassin Mohamed
- Battle of Mogadishu (2010–2011)