Somali guerrilla airplane shot down U.S. spy

Mogadishu, Somalia: 20 Oct - Gerila Somali ship shot down a U.S. spy flight that flew over the southern port city, Kismayu, on Monday, and look for debris flying boat without a guide it, said an interpreter proficient gerila collection.Last month, U.S. commandos killed a suspected al-Qaeda figure most desired gerila allied with al-Shabaab in an attack by helicopter in southern Somalia controlled by a collection of fighters that."We were shooting at U.S. ships being eyed fly-eye to gather information in Kismayu. Our forces attacked the ship and shot him and we look to see it burning. We suspect that the ship fell into the sea," said Sheikh Hassan Yacqub, jurucakap collection of al-Shabaab in Kismayu."We're still looking," he told Reuters.Al Shabaab control over many areas of southern and central Somalia where they waged war against the government gerila President Sheikh Sharif Ahmed fragile UN-backed.Kismayu residents regularly report seeing the spy plane without a guide who allegedly belong to the U.S., which is believed to be flown from warships in the Indian Ocean, flew over the port of Bandar.Meanwhile, residents in small airports Galhareeri said al-Shabaab gerila destroy a mosque, the tomb of the Sufi Muslim shrine and a Sufi Muslim university there on Sunday, having fired shots into the air to dispel protesters local.Collection was in the past to attack the leaders and Sufi shrines on the grounds of their religious practices conflict with the translation of strict Islamic law which they profess.A jurucakap Waljamaah Ahlu Sunna, a collection of moderates who fight al-Shabaab in Somalia's central region, condemned the attack on the holy places in Galhareeri."We strongly condemn al-Shabaab for their evil actions," said Abdullahi Sheikh Abu Yusuf told Reuters.Somalia hit by power struggle and anarchism since warlords overthrew dictator Mohamed Siad Barre Military in 1991. Kidnapping, and deadly violence hit the country's piracy.Since early 2007, Iraq-style tactics gerila use, including bomb attacks and killing of employees, aid workers, intellectuals and Askar Ethiopia.Thousands of people were killed and approximately one million people live in refugee camps in the country due to conflict.The interim government signed a peace agreement with some opposition figures, but the deal was rejected by al-Shabaab and other tribe-tribe hardline opposition.Washington called the al-Shabaab as a terrorist organization that has close ties with al-Qaeda network leader Osama bin Laden.Gerila Muslim hardliners, who launched the offensive on 7 May to topple the UN backed interim government headed by moderate leader Sharif Ahmed, increase their attacks.Three important employees killed in several days, which includes a member of parliament, a policy commander Mogadishu and a minister who was killed in a suicide bomb attack.In addition to bloody uprising, the government of Somalia is also facing a series of piracy off the coast of the country.Somalia's weak transitional government is not able to stop the pirates who hijack ships and demand ransom for the release of the ships and their crews.The pirates, armed with rocket-propelled grenades and automatic rifles, using fast boats to chase their target.The waters off the coast of Somalia is a place in the world's most piracy-prone, and the International Maritime Bureau reporting 24 attacks in the region between April and June last year alone

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