The United States offers millions for information leading to the capture of the world's most wanted terrorists.
A Somali militant group has purportedly countered with an offer of camels for U.S. officials.
Al-Shabaab
has placed a bounty of 10 camels for President Barack Obama and two
camels for information on Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.
An
audio statement posted on jihadist websites purportedly from
Al-Shabaab jeered news that the United States is offering millions of
dollars for information on seven key members of al-Shabaab through its
Rewards for Justice program.
The
man on the audio claimed to be Fuad Mohamed Khalaf, considered by the
State Department to be Al-Shabaab's leading fundraiser. The United
States has offered $5 million for information of his whereabouts.
"Whoever
brings the mujahidin information about the whereabouts of infidel
Obama and the lady of Bill Clinton, the woman named Hillary Clinton, I
will give a reward," the man said.
A
study by Galkayo University, which looked at the effects of drought on
livestock, said the average cost of a camel in Somalia is $700.
CNN
can not independently verify the authenticity of the audio recording,
which was purportedly made by Khalaf during a speech to followers in
the southern port city of Merca.
The U.S. State Department's Rewards for Justice program is offering $7 million for information on the location of Ahmed Abdi Aw-Mohamed, the founder of the Islamist group in Somalia.
This
year, he and al Qaeda's leader, Ayman al-Zawahiri, released a joint
video formally announcing a merger between the terror groups.
In
announcing the bounties on Mohamed and his key associates Thursday,
the State Department called al-Shabaab "a threat to the stability of
East Africa and to the national security interests of the United
States."
The
State Department said it is also offering up to $5 million each for
information leading to the location of four of Aw-Mohamed's associates,
including Khalaf. In addition, it is offering up to $3 million each
for two of the terror group's other leaders.
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