Kenya has killed the commander of an elite unit within Somalia’s al Shabaab Islamist insurgency, a man blamed for masterminding a deadly attack on a Kenyan military camp in southern Somalia last month, the Kenyan military said on Thursday.
Kenyan troops, working under the African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM), killed Mohamed Karatey, al Shabaab’s deputy commander and head of intelligence, at a graduation ceremony for insurgent fighters on Feb. 8, the Kenya Defense Forces said in a statement.
“It is believed Karatey played a major role in the recent attack on KDF troops in El Adde by the deployment of his suicide bombers,” KDF said in a statement.
“His killing now adds to that of the killing of Abdi Dek, the operation commander of the Abu Zubeyr Brigade that carried out the attack in El Adde.”
The statement gave no further details on killing of Karatey but said the Kenyan military had also killed 42 al Shabaab recruits and 10 other mid-level al Shabaab commanders during the raid. It was not possible to independently verify the killings.
Kenyan troops took heavy losses when al Shabaab launched a dawn raid on their camp in El Adde near the Kenyan border on Jan. 15, although they have not disclosed exact casualty figures.
Al Shabaab claimed the attack had killed more than 100 soldiers. The Islamist insurgents have links to al Qaeda and seek to overthrow Somalia’s weak Western-backed government and drive out the African Union soldiers supporting them.
Al Shabaab has inflated casualty figures in the past, while other official estimates often play them down.
The unit that Karatey headed – known as Amniyat – comprises spies, suicide bombers and explosives experts.