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Somali militants kill prominent U.S. jihadist -witnesses

by Reuters
Thursday, 12 September 2013 10:27 GMT

MOGADISHU, Sept 12 (Reuters) - A prominent U.S.-born Islamist militant was killed in Somalia on Thursday after he fell out with senior commanders of the al Shabaab rebel group, witnesses said.

Residents in al Baate village in southern Somalia said Alabama-born Omar Hammami, commonly known as Abu Mansoor al-Amriki or 'the American', and a British national known as Usama al-Britani were shot dead in a dawn raid on their hideout.

Hammami's killing exposed widening rifts in al Shabaab's top ranks as the group affiliated to al Qaeda grapples with an African Union-led military offensive that has captured key cities from the militants, depriving them of revenues.

"This morning al-Amriki and his comrades were attacked by well armed fighters," said village resident Hussein Nur. "After a brief fight al-Amriki and his two colleagues were killed. Several of their guards escaped."

A second villager confirmed the gun battle and said he had heard al Shabaab fighters confirm the deaths, though he had not seen the bodies.

"No-one is allowed to go near the scene," the shopkeeper told Reuters by telephone from the village that is under militant control.

Hammami is believed to have arrived in Somalia aged 22 in late 2006, shortly before a U.S.-backed Ethiopian military incursion into the war-shattered Horn of Africa country to rout an Islamist administration that had dislodged the government.

Fluent in Somali, Hammami swiftly became an influential leader of al Shabaab's foreign jihadists fighting to topple a government seen as a Western puppet and impose a strict interpretation of sharia law on Somalia.

Al Shabaab announced a formal alliance with al Qaeda in February 2012. Hammami was added to the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation's Most Wanted Terror list in November that year and a $5 million bounty was offered for information leading to his capture. (Reprting by Feisal Omar and Abdi Sheikh; Writing by Richard Lough; Editing by Edmund Blair and Paul Taylor)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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