Somalia names former al-Shabab deputy as government minister

2 August 2022, 16:54

Mukhtar Robow
Somalia Extremist Defector. Picture: PA

Some Somalis say his appointment is disrespectful to victims of al-Shabab violence.

A former deputy leader of the al-Shabab extremist group has been named a government minister by Somalia’s new administration in a move some analysts claim is a chance to persuade fighters to denounce violence.

Mukhtar Robow has been given the post of religious affairs minister in the government of President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud.

Not all Somalis supported his ministerial appointment, with some calling it disrespectful to those who lost loved ones in al-Shabab attacks.

Mr Robow, who once had a five million dollar (£4 million) US bounty on his head, defected from the al Qaida-linked al-Shabab in 2017 and at first was greeted with praise by Somalia’s government.

But when he tried to seek the leadership of the country’s south-west region in 2018, he was detained.

Mukhtar Robow
Mukhtar Robow is the new religious affairs minister (AP)

The reason behind Mr Robow’s arrest has never been made clear, Somalia’s current president on multiple occasions has said the detention had no legal grounds. Somalia’s government did not comment on his appointment on Tuesday.

Mr Robow, who is believed to be in his early fifties, studied Islamic law in Sudan and is believed to have participated in the anti-Soviet fighting in Afghanistan. He once praised Osama bin Laden and tried to impose an Islamic state in Somalia.

In 2008, the US imposed sanctions on him and named him a “specially designated global terrorist”.

He left al-Shabab after a dispute with the group’s hardliners. “I disagreed with their creed, which does not serve Islamic religion,” he said at the time.

His defection occurred shortly after the US removed the bounty from his head at the Somali government’s request.

Somalia has engaged in US-backed efforts encourage fighters to leave al-Shabab in the belief that each defection exposes weakness in the extremist group, which has thousands of fighters and still controls large parts of the rural south and central regions.

By Press Association

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