Somalia has released without charge a former minister and fierce critic of the government who spent two days in jail after being arrested for alleged treason, a lawmaker told Reuters on Thursday.
The arrest of Abdirahman Abdishakur, who was a candidate in a February election won by President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed, followed mounting pressure on the president and his UN-backed government to end an Islamist insurgency.
“Last night at midnight, they released ex-minister Abdirahman Abdishakur,” lawmaker Mahad Salad told Reuters.
The MP said he, other colleagues and the ex-minister were going to court on Thursday to “know the evidence on what he (Abdishakur) was first arrested”.
Islamist militants al Shabaab have been escalating pressure on Mohamed’s government by staging frequent and increasingly large-scale bombings against both civilian and military targets in recent months in the capital Mogadishu and elsewhere.
The group is fighting to expel African Union peacekeeping force from the Horn of African nation, topple the federal government and impose rule based on its strict interpretation of Islam’s sharia law.
No fewer than 500 people were killed in twin bomb blasts in Mogadishu in October while this month a suicide bomber killed at least 18 people at a Mogadishu police academy.
At a news conference after his arrest, Somalia’s attorney-general Ahmed Dahir had described Abdishakur’s house as a hub for the opposition and a gathering point for people “who want to collapse the government”.
Somalia has been locked in lawlessness and violence since the early 1990s, following the ouster of dictator Said Barre. (NAN)