Somalia militant group al-Shabaab killed one passenger and is holding five others hostage after their United Nations helicopter made an emergency landing in territory controlled by the al-Qaeda affiliate, according to the regional minister of internal security.
The UN helicopter carrying soldiers and medical personal was on an evacuation mission and was forced to land in the Galgudud region of central Somalia after a mechanical failure, Mohamed Abdi Adan, the minister of internal security of the Galmudug state, said by telephone on Wednesday.
“Two of the seven passengers, one of whom was a Somali national, were able to escape with rifles, but another person who attempted to escape was killed by the militants,” Mr Abdi Adan said. “Militants took hostage the remaining individuals after the helicopter crashed.”
Al-Shabaab has been waging an insurgency against the Somali government since 2006 in a bid to establish its own rule based on a strict interpretation of sharia, Islamic law.
Leipzig stays true to Bach, 340 years on
‘No one will be left behind’: Ukraine struggles to return Mariupol defenders from Russia three years after port siege
‘The scene was like the end of the world’: Thailand reels from earthquake
It took about 40 seconds for US immigration officers to lift the Turkish student off the streets of Boston
While the government has managed to ward off the militants from several territories since the mid-2010s, al-Shabaab controls swathes of land in southern and central Somalia and has continued to target civilians and stage attacks on military establishments. – Bloomberg/Reuters