Somali singer cum legislator Saado Ali Warsame assassinated

Residents of Mogadishu remove the body of female MP and former singer Sado Ali Warsame after gunmen opened fire at her car on July 23, 2014 killing her and her driver in Somalia’s capital Mogadishu. PHOTO | ABDULFITAH HASHI NOR

What you need to know:

  • No one immediately claimed responsibility for the attack, but Somalia’s Al-Qaeda-linked Al-Shabaab threatened earlier this year to kill the country’s MPs “one by one”.
  • Recent Al-Shabaab attacks in Somalia have targeted key areas of government and security forces.

MOGADISHU

Somali lawmaker and prominent singer-songwriter Saado Ali Warsame was shot dead on Wednesday in the capital Mogadishu in the latest attack against the government, police and witnesses said.

Gunmen in a vehicle applied breaks in front of Ms Saado’s vehicle and then showered a hail of bullets on her car.

The shooting is the latest in a string of shootings or bombings targeting government officials.

Witnesses said armed men ambushed Warsame’s car as it was travelling in the south of the capital, killing her and her driver.

“Lawmaker Saado Ali Warsame was killed with her driver by unidentified gunmen,” police officer Mohamed Hassan said. Warsame is the fourth Somali lawmaker to be killed since the start of the year.

No one immediately claimed responsibility for the attack, but Somalia’s Al-Qaeda-linked Al-Shabaab threatened earlier this year to kill the country’s MPs “one by one”.

Al-Shabaab have vowed to intensify attacks during the ongoing Muslim holy month of Ramadhan.

“I saw the gunmen driving in a car following the MP, then they opened fire... she died instantly and the gunmen then escaped,” said Abdukadir Ali, a witness.

“The dead body of the lawmaker and her driver were left in a pool of blood.”

Warsame was famous for her songs in the 1970s, when she sang about political and social justice in opposition to the hardline rule of then dictator Siad Barre before he was toppled in 1991, an event that triggered the all-out civil war in Somalia that still drags on today.

Al-Shabaab fighters fled fixed positions in Mogadishu three years ago and have since lost most large towns to a 22,000-strong UN-backed African Union force, fighting alongside government soldiers.

But they still hold sway in vast swathes of the rural hinterland from which they regularly launch guerrilla raids.

Recent Al-Shabaab attacks in Somalia have targeted key areas of government and security forces in an apparent bid to discredit claims by the authorities and AU troops that they are winning the war.