Somali President Warns Shebab on Joining Islamic State

W460

Somalia's president called on Islamist Shebab fighters Wednesday to surrender amid reports factions have shifted allegiance from Al-Qaida to Islamic State.

Both militant franchises are "destroyers", President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud said in a statement, saying he had followed "with interest the now-public dispute within Al-Shebab, over whether to swear allegiance to Al-Qaida or the Islamic State."

Mohamud said the reported divisions were "symptomatic of a group that has lost its way", and warned that Somalis "do not need a new brand of horror and repression."

The Shebab, East Africa's long-time Al-Qaida branch, is fighting to overthrow the internationally-backed government in Mogadishu, which is protected by 22,000 African Union troops.

The Islamists have lost much ground in recent years but remain a threat in both Somalia and neighboring Kenya, where they have carried out a series of attacks.

The reported division comes at a time when Islamic State in Iraq and Syria has become the jihadist franchise of choice, attracting fighters from abroad and other militant groups such as Boko Haram in Nigeria.

But Al-Qaida has also recently expanded its territory in Yemen, just across the Gulf of Aden from Somalia.

"Do not think that your choice is limited to one of two puppet-masters, Al-Qaida or Daesh (Islamic State)," Mohamud added. "There is another option, the right and holy option: the path to peace."

The extent of Shebab support for a move to IS is not known, while international fighters in the Shebab have been some of the hardest hit by drone strikes and factional infighting.

Some Shebab militants are focused more on an internal Somali agenda -- including navigating the Horn of Africa nation's complex clan politics -- rather than fighting for a wider international Islamist agenda.

"I will keep saying until there are no more of you left to say it to, if you feel you are within the grip of these terrorists and you want another option, stretch out your hands to the government," Mohamud said.

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