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Topple Somali leader - Bin Laden | |
(21 minutes later) | |
Osama Bin Laden has called for the overthrow of Somalia's moderate Islamist president in an audio recording published on the internet. | Osama Bin Laden has called for the overthrow of Somalia's moderate Islamist president in an audio recording published on the internet. |
Bin Laden said President Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed had "changed to partner up with the infidel". | Bin Laden said President Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed had "changed to partner up with the infidel". |
Mr Ahmed was inaugurated in January after UN-brokered reconciliation talks and has promised to introduce Sharia law to the strongly Muslim country. | Mr Ahmed was inaugurated in January after UN-brokered reconciliation talks and has promised to introduce Sharia law to the strongly Muslim country. |
But al-Shabab insurgents allied to al-Qaeda have continued to fight him. | But al-Shabab insurgents allied to al-Qaeda have continued to fight him. |
Correspondents say the voice on the recording could not be immediately verified but it resembles that of Bin Laden and was published on known militant websites. | Correspondents say the voice on the recording could not be immediately verified but it resembles that of Bin Laden and was published on known militant websites. |
'Enemies' pay' | |
The 12-minute tape - entitled "Fight on, champions of Somalia" - carried an often-seen image of Bin Laden with a map of Somalia in the background. | The 12-minute tape - entitled "Fight on, champions of Somalia" - carried an often-seen image of Bin Laden with a map of Somalia in the background. |
The Somali leader's election had been "induced by the American envoy in Kenya", the tape said. | |
This Sheikh Sharif... must be fought and toppled Bin Laden tape class="" href="/1/hi/world/africa/7952205.stm">Kenya to raise taxes for Somalia class="" href="/1/hi/world/africa/7861853.stm">Somali president faces tough task It accused Mr Ahmed of having "changed and turned back on his heels... to partner up with the infidel" in a national unity government. | |
"This Sheikh Sharif... must be fought and toppled," the tape said, before comparing the Somali leader to "the [Arab] presidents who are in the pay of our enemies". | |
It added: "How can intelligent people believe that yesterday's enemies on the basis of religion can become today's friends?" | |
Mr Ahmed was a leader of the Union of Islamic Courts which controlled Mogadishu in 2006 before being ousted by Ethiopian forces, backing the previous Somali president. | |
Somalia, a nation of about eight million people, has not had a functioning national government since warlords overthrew Siad Barre in 1991 and then turned on each other. | |
As part of a UN-brokered deal to reconcile moderate Islamists and dissident lawmakers in a unity government, Ethiopian troops withdrew in January. | |
President Ahmed has the support of several Islamist groups but al-Shabab has continued to fight the Somali government and the African Union peacekeepers in Mogadishu. | |
The hardline Islamist guerrillas now control much of southern and central Somalia. | |
Earlier this month the Somali cabinet backed President Ahmed's plan to introduce Sharia law, a move analysts say is designed to drain support for al-Shabab. | |
But the hardline Islamists condemned the move. |