Islamist with $10-M bounty slain
Maalim Ayman, leader of the Al-Shabaab unit Jaysh Ayman, was wanted by the US.

Maalim Ayman, leader of the Al-Shabaab unit Jaysh Ayman, was wanted by the US.


SYDNEY, Australia (AFP) — Young men and boys are being targeted for sexual extortion on social media platforms,…

SHANGHAI, China (AFP) — Chinese users of artificial intelligence (AI)-powered companion bots have bid heart-rending…

‘China firmly opposes illegal unilateral sanctions that have no basis in international law.’

PARIS, France (AFP) — Generative AI chatbots capable of writing emails and computer code, translating, organizing a…

WASHINGTON, United States (AFP) — Multiple book publishers sued Google on Tuesday for allegedly stealing copyrighted…
Somali troops and United States forces this week killed a senior commander of the Al-Shabaab militant group with a $10 million American bounty on his head, the African nation's information minister said.
The Al-Qaeda-linked Islamists have led a 16-year insurgency against the fragile central government and control swathes of rural Somalia.
Maalim Ayman, leader of the Al-Shabaab unit Jaysh Ayman, was wanted by the US over an attack on an air base in Kenya in January 2020 that left three Americans dead.
"Maalim Ayman, a senior leader of Al Shabaab, was confirmed to have been killed in a joint operation by the Somali National Army with assistance from US forces on December 17th," Information Minister Daud Aweis said on X on Thursday.
He said Ayman was responsible for "planning multiple lethal terrorist attacks in #Somalia and nearby countries."
In January, the US State Department said Ayman planned the 2020 attack on the Manda Bay Airfield on Kenya's northern coast, offering a reward of up to $10 million for information that could lead to his capture.
Washington has worked closely with Mogadishu to counter Al-Shabaab, which has come under pressure from a Somali government offensive launched last year with the backing of local clan militias as well as air support from the US and African Union forces.
But after making significant progress in recapturing territory, the offensive has stalled, raising questions about the government's capacity to fight the Islamists.
WITH AFP