Somalia's transitional government says it is not surprised that militant group al-Shabab has formally joined forces with al-Qaida.
The government's minister of information, Abdulkadir Hussein Mohamed, said in a statement Friday that word of the alliance is “no news to us.”
He asserted that al-Shabab leaders are paid representatives of al-Qaida, and that al-Shabab can no longer, in his words, “masquerade as an indigenous Somali-Islamic organization.”
Al-Qaida leader Ayman al-Zawahiri announced the alliance with al-Shabab in a video message posted to jihadist websites Thursday.
The group had previously said it is aligned with al-Qaida, and in June pledged allegiance to al-Zawahiri, after U.S. forces killed Osama bin Laden.
Al-Shabab has been battling the Somali government for five years in a bid to take control of the country and impose a strict form of Islamic law.
The group is increasingly seen as a threat in East Africa, prompting the governments of Kenya and Ethiopia to send troops into Somalia.
Al-Shabab once controlled most of the Somali capital, Mogadishu, but was recently pushed out by African Union and Somali government forces.
The United States has designated al-Shabab as a terrorist organization. VoA.
Numerous Somali Refugees from the United States have been killed or captured fighting for or financing al-Shabab terrorists in Somalia, and in the United States.