By ABDI GULED Associated Press
MOGADISHU, Somalia July 21, 2012 (AP)
Security forces of a
semi-autonomous region in northern Somalia seized a boat carrying weapons that
were being smuggled from al-Qaida militants in Yemen to fighters in Somalia, an
official said Saturday.
The boat was carrying explosives,
switches, rockets, guns, ammunition and rocket-propelled grenades, said the
ports and anti-piracy minister of Puntland, Said Mohamed Rage. He did not
provide a detailed breakdown of how many weapons were seized.
"They (al-Qaida) were trying
to offload the arms on the Alula coast, then to smuggle them to al-Shabab in
the south of Somalia by road. They use our region as a gateway to smuggle
fighters from Yemen and Somalia," he said.
One Yemeni man was arrested when
the boat was seized Friday afternoon, he added.
Al-Qaida and al-Shabab — the most
powerful militant group in Somalia — announced a merger earlier this year.
Al-Shabab, however, has been under
increasing military pressure across Somalia over the last year because of
stepped-up operations by the African Union military force and Ethiopian troops.
Human traffickers use the Puntland
region to send refugees across the Gulf of Aden over to Yemen, and Rage said
that hundreds of al-Shabab fighters are trying to blend in with that human
trafficking network.
Puntland fears that
al-Qaida-linked violence in Yemen will eventually spill over into northeastern
Somalia.
"Their next base will be the
mountainous hideouts in our region. They don't have any other alternative or
base from which they can launch attacks. It's a worrying thing," Rage
said.
Al-Shabab militants recently
merged with a Puntland warlord — Mohamed Said Atom — and have clashed with
government forces in Puntland several times this year.
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