In Somalia, the terror outfit al-Shabaab has devoured for years gaining and losing ground. But in the digital environment, al-Shabaab has limitless space in which to grow. It’s where one of the world’s best-financed terror groupings spreads its propaganda, disinformation and recruiting transmissions throughout the region, the mainland and the world.
Shahada News Agency, one of al-Shabaab’s most famous online messengers, recently announced it is extending its coverage “to include all countries of the Islamic world.” By developing its digital reach, al-Shabaab has signalled a passion to compete with the continent’s other violent extremist organizations for supremacy. Several regional terror companies in Africa are affiliated with the Islamic State group and have strong media operations of their own.
On July 9, Shahada News Agency reported the launch of accounts on Facebook and X (formerly Twitter) and conveyed the following message: “[We] will no longer be limited to Somalia and East Africa as it always was, in an attempt to provide a news service that is more accommodating to the needs of the acceleration and complexity of events and the comprehensiveness of the conflict.”
Shahada’s website generally publishes several reports a day in Arabic. Most are translations of English-language information from traditional media sources, but some are original pieces and analyses. Until recently, the issues of these articles were mostly events in Somalia, Kenya and East Africa. According to the independent research body of the Middle East Media Research Institute’s Cyber & Jihad Lab, Shahada News Agency periodically established accounts on Facebook and Twitter before, but they were deleted within days.
Shahada also publishes official al-Shabaab communications, including declarations of responsibility for attacks. These Arabic statements are translated from Somali-language statements that originally were published on another al-Shabaab media platform called Al-Kataib, which works mostly on the encrypted messaging platform Telegram with numerous channels in multiple languages. Researchers have discovered al-Shabaab’s messaging to be centrally managed and consistent across all media.
The pace with which the narratives spread from one social media platform to another, then to radio and news agencies, offers high levels of coordination across the group’s contacts infrastructure. In a 2023 study, the nonprofit Code for Africa established a clear association between Al-Kataib and Shahada News Agency, revealing their association with sophisticated content-sharing between the two media components that pose a growing threat to safety.
That threat is now extending across the continent and the Middle East as al-Shabaab is driving its messages to a wider audience. It becomes increasingly obvious that decoding the operations of Al-Kataib and Shahada News Agency is critical to dismantling al-Shabaab’s web of extremist influence. This revelation highlights the urgency of monitoring and opposing the terrorist group’s digital company. In addition, it emphasises the critical importance of global collaboration in neutralizing the threat posed by these professional manipulators of cyberspace as they utilise their influence to advance their extremist reach in the Sahel and beyond.