/ 10 August 2010

Somalia’s al-Shabaab bans three aid agencies

A Somali militant group with links to al-Qaeda on Monday announced it had banned three Christian aid agencies from its territory, and one aid group said militants had occupied its offices in southern Somalia.

World Vision, the Adventist Development and Relief Agency, and Diakonia must immediately leave Somalia because the groups were actively propagating Christianity, the militant group al-Shabaab said in a statement. Somalia is an overwhelmingly Muslim country, and al-Shabaab promotes a particularly hard-line and conservative reading of Islam.

“Acting as missionaries under the guise of humanitarian work, the organisations have been spreading their corrupted ideologies in order to taint the pure creed of the Muslims in Somalia,” al-Shabaab said.

World Vision Somalia’s spokesperson, Amanda Koech, said that her organisation was surprised to receive al-Shabaab’s order to close down. Al-Shabaab militants occupied the group’s offices in the southern Somali towns of Duale, Baidoa and Wajid, she said. World Vision has asked its staff to remain at home for now.

“World Vision is a Christian organisation motivated by Christian values to help the needy in the society. While World Vision recognises the need to remain impartial in responding to the needy, by policy World Vision is prohibited to proselytise in its work,” Koech said in a statement.

Warning
Koech said World Vision does not have any international staff in southern Somalia. All World Vision staff in that part of the Horn of Africa nation are Somalis and primarily Muslim, she said.

Al-Shabaab has also warned other aid agencies against taking up the work of the banned organisations, saying they will face “appropriate disciplinary measures”.

The group, which claimed responsibility for twin blasts in Uganda during the World Cup final that killed 76 people, has already banned several UN agencies and aid groups. Together with allied groups, al-Shabaab controls most of southern Somalia, including a large part of Mogadishu.

The ultra-conservative and militant al-Shabaab draws comparisons to Afghanistan’s Taliban. Al-Shabaab’s accusations that the three groups were proselytising come only days after the killings last Thursday of 10 members of a medical mission in Afghanistan. The Taliban claimed the group were spies and tried to convert Muslims. — Sapa-AP