Terrorists turn to female suicide bombers in new trend
Sunday August 4 2019
Somali women carry weapons during a
demonstration organised by Al Shabaab on July 5, 2010. They were protesting
against Amisom forces. Women play a crucial role in helping members of the
Amniyat. PHOTO | AFP
- Previously it was thought widely that women were primarily recruited by Al-Shabaab as brides for fighters and were meant to cook and clean in the militants’ camps.
- However more women are now assuming greater roles in active combat, intelligence gathering, planning, coordination, and execution of attacks, according to the intelligence report.
- The new trend of Al-Shabaab recruiting an alarmingly high number of women into their rank and file is mainly because women are less lily to raise suspicious when undertaking terror activities.
By KIPCHUMBA SOME
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On July 24, this year, a female
suicide bomber walked into a security meeting being held at the office of
Mogadishu mayor Abdirahman Omar Osman and blew herself up killing seven and
injuring several others.
Al-Shabab terrorists claimed
responsibility for the attack, telling local media that UN envoy to Somalia
James Swan, who had left the building when the attack happened, was their
target. Mr Osman was critically injured in the blast and later died in Qatar
where he was receiving treatment.
COORDINATION
This was the fourth known time
Al-Shabaab has used a woman in a suicide attack. Now the frequency at which it
is deploying women in their attack missions is alarming regional security
agencies.
Not only are they concerned by the
high rate at which the Al-Qaeda-affiliated group is recruiting young well-
educated women, but are also wary about the high profile positions it is giving
them in the insurgency movement.
A confidential Kenyan security brief
seen by the Sunday Nation reveals that the jihadi organisation is
increasingly giving the young women prominent roles in carrying out
intelligence operations and attacks, as they are less likely to attract
attention. A significant number of women is currently thought to be undergoing
training un Somalia, some of them Kenyan
“Police sources indicate that Al-Shabaab is
training women to be deployed as facilitators, logisticians and even as
attackers in Somalia, Kenya and other East African countries,” said the
security report.
Previously it was thought widely
that women were primarily recruited by Al-Shabaab as brides for fighters and
were meant to cook and clean in the militants’ camps.
However more women are now assuming
greater roles in active combat, intelligence gathering, planning, coordination,
and execution of attacks, according to the intelligence report.
On Saturday, Inspector General (IG)
of Police Hillary Mutyambai said security agencies were on high alert.
“We are aware that Al-Shabaab is
changing tack and increasingly using women as facilitators and spies, not just
brides for the fighters. More women are being trained to take up more senior
roles that were reserved for men,” he said.
The IG said this should be "a
wake-up call to the security agencies and members of the public to be on the
lookout".
He said police had been properly
briefed on the matter but urged private security guards manning various
facilities to ensure they do thorough scrutiny."
DEADLY WEAPON
The Kenyan security report adds that
some of the women are to be deployed to befriend government officials and
identify loopholes in security and report to Al-Shabaab for planning of the
attacks.
The most recent high-profile case
involved Violet Kemunto who was the wife of Ali Salim Gichunge, aka Farouk, the
mastermind of the DusitD2 hotel complex attack in January this year.
Kemunto is said believed to have
facilitated the welfare of Gichunge and his fellow attackers. Police believe
that she fled to Somalia on the day of the attack that claimed 20 lives.
Another female accomplice, Miriam
Abdi, whom is believed to have played a central role in the delivery of the
deadly weapons used in the attack is still on the run.
The new trend of Al-Shabaab
recruiting an alarmingly high number of women into their rank and file is
mainly because women are less lily to raise suspicious when undertaking terror
activities.
“Unlike men, women are considered by
society to be less violent and therefore may escape scrutiny by security
officers,” said the security brief.
The first recorded instance
Al-Shabaab deployed a female suicide bomber was on June 2011 when Somalia’s
interior minister Abdishakur Sheikh Hassan was killed by his teenage niece in a
suicide bomb attack in his house.
This was the first ever suicide bomb
attack carried out by a woman in Somalia and would set precedence for the group
to increasingly deploy women in their campaign of terror across the region.
The use of a female suicide bomber
was a rare and surprising move from the group which has been primarily using
male combatants and suicide bombers to carry out attacks in the Kenya and other
East African countries. It seems the trend is on an upward rise.
In September 2016 three women —
Tasmin Yaqub, Maimuna Abdirahman, and Ramla Abdirahman — casually strolled into
Mombasa Central Police Station clad in buibui’s and proceeded to occurrence
book desk as if to report an incident.
COURIERS & SPIES
The unsuspecting officers on duty
welcomed them to present their case and that is when one of the women is
alleged to have lurched forth and attacked the officers with a dagger while the
two others attempted to burn the station down with petrol bombs. In the ensuing
commotion the women were shot dead.
Investigations revealed that Tasmin
— the mastermind of the attack — was a member of the Islamic State which
claimed responsibility for the attack. Her fellow alleged attackers, sisters
Maimuna and Ramla, attended Ainaba madrasa as well as Markoz Noor madrasa at
Sparki mosque in Mombasa where they studied religion.
The daring frontal attack on the
police station by the three women left many Kenyans baffled, few having
expected women to take an active role to carry out attacks.
“The women were used as
couriers and spies by the terror group since they were hard to suspect and
could easily escape security roadblocks and scrutiny,” said the intelligence
report.
Security analyst George Musamali
notes that among the things that drive women to join Islamists groups is the
“romantic notion of the lives of extremists, honour and accolades as well as
the idea of being a mujahidin’s spouse, widow or mother.
This has led to many women being
lured into jihadi theatres. The most notable case is that of Khadija Abubakar
Ahmed, Mariam Said Aboud, Halima Adan, and Ummulkheir Sadri Abdalla, famously
romanticised as the ‘AlShababes.’
The four women — all university
students — were arrested in El Wak in March 2015 on suspicions that they were
trying to cross the border into Somalia to join the insurgency group.
Security agencies believe that the
trio was recruited online by one Halima Adan Ali, a notorious Al-Shabaab and
Islamic State recruiter and financial facilitator.
SEXUAL ABUSE
The police believed that the young
women were aided in their aborted mission by Haniya Sagar, the wife fiery
Muslim cleric Aboud Rogo, who was shot dead by unknown people in August 2012.
Haniya and three others were charged
in 2016 with aiding terror activities. She was jailed for 10 years in February
2018, but was set free on appeal in October.
Maryam died in May last year while
their case was ongoing. Her three alleged accomplices, Khadija, Halima and
Ummulkheir were set free by a Mombasa court in February this year on grounds
that the prosecution had failed to prove 20 terror-related charges they were
facing.
While women have fallen pretty to
the lure of international jihadism, reports from those who have escaped the
clutches of the militant group paint a picture of suffering, sexual abuse and
violence that the women suffer at the hands of male fighters.
“The women indicate that they are
forcibly married off to multiple men after their husbands are killed at war and
this cycle continues,” said the intelligence report.
"Many women are currently
calling for help to return to the country from Somalia after undergoing hell in
the war torn country," it added.
The female recruits are also used to
run elaborate financial facilitation conduits that support insurgency
activities. For example, Nuseiba Hajji Osman alias Umm Fidaa alias Ummulxarb is
the spouse of key Islamic State point man in the region, Mohamed Ali aka Abu
Fidaa.
The local female entrants add to a
growing number of international women who have joined the dark world of global
terrorism and in the process redefined their roles from victims to active
agents.
Before them, a mother of four with a
comely face from the United Kingdom, Samantha Lewthwaite, famously nicknamed
the “white widow”, had captured world imagination after she joined Al-Shabaab.
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