Mogadishu: A leader of Somali extremist group Al Shebaab, who has a $3 million US bounty on his head, has surrendered, a Somali government source and local media said on Saturday.
Zakariya Ismail Ahmed Hersi was one of seven Al Shebaab leaders for whom the US State Department in 2012 offered a total of $33 million in reward money for information that led to their capture.
If confirmed, Hersi's surrender would be a second major blow to al Shebaab's leadership in just a few months. In September the group's main leader, Ahmed Abdi Godane, was assassinated by a US drone strike.
"Al Shebaab leader Zakariya Ismail surrendered to government forces in El Wak, Gedo region. He is expected to be flown to Mogadishu tomorrow," a senior government official told Reuters.
State radio website Radio Muqdisho also reported Hersi's surrender and said he was "the general secretary of al Shebaab's finance (department)" but did not give reasons for his surrender.
A member of Al Shebaab's media team told Reuters by telephone that the group had seen media reports about Hersi's arrest and was "going to investigate whether or not the man talked about belonged to us".
Amnesty
While the government offered an amnesty to Al Shebaab members in September, none of the key leaders of the group has so far taken up the offer. Although Al Seabaab still controls chunks of the countryside in south and central Somalia, this year it has lost several key towns during two major offensives by African Union peacekeepers and the Somali National Army.
However, the group continues to carry out hit-and-run attacks in Somalia and in neighbouring Kenya, where it has killed hundreds of people over the past 18 months.
It attacked a major African Union base in the Somali capital Mogadishu on Thursday in an audacious raid that lasted several hours.