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Radio chief in Somalia shot dead | Radio chief in Somalia shot dead |
(about 4 hours later) | |
The director of Somalia's independent HornAfrik radio station, Said Tahlil Ahmed, has been killed in the capital. | The director of Somalia's independent HornAfrik radio station, Said Tahlil Ahmed, has been killed in the capital. |
An eyewitness told the BBC a group of journalists were attacked on their way to a press conference called by the hardline Islamist militia al-Shabab. | An eyewitness told the BBC a group of journalists were attacked on their way to a press conference called by the hardline Islamist militia al-Shabab. |
A spokesman for the group denied to the BBC any responsibility for the killing. | |
Al-Shabab does not support the new president - Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed, a moderate Islamist - recently elected by MPs as part of a peace process. | Al-Shabab does not support the new president - Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed, a moderate Islamist - recently elected by MPs as part of a peace process. |
Civilians and journalists gathered outside the HornAfrik station in Mogadishu after Wednesday's killing. | |
And fighters belonging to the Union of Islamic Courts - who are loyal to the new president - turned up to provide security. | |
Since the announcement of the murder, all radio stations in the capital have been playing Koranic verses. | Since the announcement of the murder, all radio stations in the capital have been playing Koranic verses. |
Analysts say this may be out of respect for Mr Ahmed or possibly because they are frightened of further attacks. | Analysts say this may be out of respect for Mr Ahmed or possibly because they are frightened of further attacks. |
Mr Ahmed is the third senior employee of the popular HornAfrik radio station to be killed in the past two years. | |
Masked gunmen | |
A journalist, who was with Mr Ahmed when he was attacked, told the BBC Somali Service that senior members of Mogadishu's radio stations had been called to a press conference by al-Shabab. | A journalist, who was with Mr Ahmed when he was attacked, told the BBC Somali Service that senior members of Mogadishu's radio stations had been called to a press conference by al-Shabab. |
We are going after those who are behind the killing and will bring them to justice Sheikh Ali Mohamed HusseinAl-Shabab representative class="" href="/1/hi/world/africa/7861853.stm">New president faces tough task | |
He said they were nearly at the venue in Mogadishu's central Bakara Market when masked gunmen fired on them. | |
Mr Ahmed fell to the ground before his attackers approached and shot him again. | |
Sheikh Ali Mohamed Hussein, the al-Shabab representative in Mogadishu, confirmed his group had invited the media to a meeting in the capital about the situation in the country. | |
But he firmly denied al-Shabab had been behind the shooting. | |
He blamed an unnamed "enemy" who he said wanted to "defame" them. | |
"We are going after those who are behind the killing and will bring them to justice," he told the BBC's Somali Service. | |
Colleagues say Mr Ahmed was a well-respected journalist who continued working in Somalia after the collapse of Siad Barre's regime in 1991 despite extremely dangerous conditions in the capital. | Colleagues say Mr Ahmed was a well-respected journalist who continued working in Somalia after the collapse of Siad Barre's regime in 1991 despite extremely dangerous conditions in the capital. |
He became the director of HornAfrik in 2007 after the station's owner, Ali Iman Sharmake, was killed by a car bomb - as he returned from the funeral of a presenter at the station who was himself murdered. | |
Media targets | |
Journalists have become targets for some of the many armed groups that roam Somalia - at least a dozen have been killed since 2007, and many more have fled the country. | |
President Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed was elected president by MPs at a meeting in neighbouring Djibouti last Friday as part of a UN-brokered plan. | |
A key part of that plan was the withdrawal of Ethiopian soldiers, who had entered Somalia just over two years ago to oust the UIC. | |
However, al-Shabab has taken advantage of the Ethiopians' pull-out to boost its control of the south and it accuses him of selling out to the West. | |
Al-Shabab now even controls Baidoa, the seat of the interim parliament, taking the central town while MPs were in neighbouring Djibouti for the presidential vote. | |
Somalia has not had a functioning central government for nearly two decades and tens of thousands of people have been killed in successive waves of violence. | Somalia has not had a functioning central government for nearly two decades and tens of thousands of people have been killed in successive waves of violence. |
About 3,600 Ugandan and Burundian peacekeepers, from an intended 8,000-strong African Union force, are deployed in Mogadishu. |