Qandala campaign
The Qandala campaign began when the Islamic State in Somalia (ISS) attacked and captured the town of Qandala in Bari, Puntland, Somalia on 26 October 2016. This takeover resulted in the displacement of over 25,700 civilians and an eventual counter-offensive by the Puntland Security Force, which succeeded in driving ISS from Qandala on 7 December, and thereafter government units continued to attack the militants' hideouts in the nearby mountains until 18 December. The fall of Qandala was the second time that an Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL)-affiliated group had captured a town in Somalia, but whereas the first takeover had lasted only for a very short time,[11] ISS had managed to hold Qandala, a town of both major strategic as well as symbolic importance, for over a month.[2]
Background[edit]
When Abdul Qadir Mumin broke away from al-Shabaab and declared allegiance to ISIL in 2015, only about 20 of the 300 Islamist fighters based in Puntland joined him.[12] Over the following year he and his followers evaded attacks by al-Shabaab militants and recruited new members; by October 2016, it was assumed that Abdul Qadir Mumin's group had significantly grown to about 300 fighters. Thus, as the first anniversary of the ISS' foundation grew near, they sought a target for their first major attack. In this regard, Qandala would be a convenient target, as Mumin's clan lived near the town, and the conquest of a significant settlement as well as the proclamation of an Islamic region in the whole of Africa could gain him more local support and sympathizers.[6]
Furthermore, Qandala is a town of both strategic as well as symbolic significance: It is generally known that the ISS receives experts, trainers, money, weapons and other materials from its allies in Yemen. ISS is active in areas, however, that are very mountainous and difficult to reach by land, so that they are generally supplied by sea; in this regard, the possession of a port town like Qandala would allow them to receive more shipments of supplies.[6][7] Conversely, Qandala is "a traditional symbol of staunch resistance to foreign occupation", as it was the site where the Somali rebel and folk hero Ali Fahiye Gedi burned the Italian flag and was subsequently imprisoned by Italian soldiers in 1914.[6]
Campaign[edit]
ISS capture of Qandala[edit]
On early 26 October, ISS militants began their surprise attack[6] against Qandala, cutting the town's phone lines while encountering little resistance. As Qandala was defended only by a very small number of soldiers, who were unable to stop the Islamic State fighters, all government officials and soldiers soon fled Qandala. Thereupon 60 ISS militants entered the town and captured it without further fighting, hoisting their flag on top of the police station[12][13] and the building where Ali Fahiye Gedi had been imprisoned.[6] Even though the jihadists tried to reassure the local population by telling them "don't panic, we will rule you according to the Islamic sharia (law)",[13] Qandala's elders asked them to leave, to which the militants insisted that "they are not going anywhere".[7]
On the next day, Qandala's schools closed, and for the first time in the town's history, thousands of its residents fled by boat and on foot to Bosaso,[6][14][15] while the Puntland Maritime Police Force deployed several gunboats to intercept any shipments by militant groups from Yemen.[6] Puntland officials also claimed that ISS began to retreat from the town, though these reports were later disproven by locals.[11] By 23 November, all civilian residents of Qandala had fled; overall 25,700 locals had been displaced due to the ISS takeover.[15][10] Meanwhile, the town's ISS garrison began to erect defences around the town to prepare for the inevitable government counter-offensive.[15]
Aftermath[edit]
Though ISS had ultimately lost all captured territory and if government sources are to be believed, suffered heavy casualties,[4] the fact that the small local ISIL branch had captured a major town and held it for over a month "could be viewed as an important symbolic victory for the group".[2]