Al-Qaida-Linked Shebab Has 'Regional Agenda' beyond Somalia, Says the U.N.

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Al-Qaida-linked Shebab militants have the "capability and intent" to spread their attacks beyond their strongholds in Somalia, a U.N. special representative warned on Saturday, calling for greater regional cooperation to combat the threat.

The Shebab "is an organization that has a regional agenda," said Nick Kay, the U.N.'s special representative in Somalia.

"The very top leadership of the organization see themselves as pursuing something above and beyond just a Somalia national agenda.

"It has had the capability and intent to carry out attacks across the region for some time," he said, adding that this intent is "stronger now".

The Shebab has recently stepped up attacks against countries that contribute to the 22,000-strong, U.N.-backed African Union force deployed against them in Somalia since 2007.

Neighboring Kenya has been a particular focus of Shebab violence, most notably with the attack on the Westgate shopping mall last September in which at least 67 people were killed.

The group also claimed responsibility for two raids earlier this month in a Kenyan tourist area which killed around 60 people.

On Thursday, Shebab gunmen attacked an African Union military base in central Somalia dressed in stolen government army uniforms, killing at least two soldiers from Djibouti, the AU said.

"It does require the countries of the region, with the support of the international community, to be much more joined up in their approach," Kay said on Saturday, calling for greater information-sharing and stronger border controls.

"It is very, very important that Somalia is stabilized and that the Somali people enjoy a government that is truly accountable to them and truly working in their interests," he added.

Somalia is due to put in place a new federal constitution in 2015 and hold elections in 2016, although the security situation could delay progress.

Chased out of Mogadishu in mid-2011, the Shebab have also abandoned key bastions in the country's border areas but retain control over vast swathes of Somalia's rural hinterland from which they carry out regular guerrilla attacks against government institutions and international forces.

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