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Somalia: Al-Shabab should not carry out amputations

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Amnesty International is calling on the Al-Shabab armed group not to carry out amputations on four men who have been accused of robbery.

The four young men were sentenced on 22 June to cross-amputation (amputation of the right hand and the left foot) by an “ad-hoc” court set up by Al-Shabab in their military camp in northern Mogadishu. They were accused of stealing pistols and mobile phones from Mogadishu residents.

Amnesty International’s Africa Programme Deputy Director, Tawanda Hondora said:

"We are appealing to al-Shabab not to carry out these cruel, inhuman and degrading punishments.

"These sentences were ordered by a sham Al-Shabab court with no due process or guarantees of fairness."

The four men allegedly admitted to the robbery, but have not been represented by a lawyer, nor are they allowed to appeal against their sentence. The amputations will reportedly take place in Al-Shabab’s camp, Masla, in northern Mogadishu.

Background

Al-Shabab factions and the Hisbul Islam armed group, headed by Sheikh Hassan Aweys, launched a military offensive against forces of the Transitional Federal Government on 7 May 2009.

The armed opposition is in control of several districts of Mogadishu. An Al-Shabab-controlled coalition in the port city of Kismayo, southern Somalia, has carried out at least two amputations since the beginning of 2009.

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Country

Somalia

Article type

Press release