Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Mahinda ditches human rights 


by Dasun Edirisinghe-September 2, 2014

Minister of Plantation Industries Mahinda Samarasinghe yesterday declined to answer questions on the fallout of the UNHRC resolution against Sri Lanka, claiming that the human rights issues were now entirely handled by the Ministry of External Affairs.

Minister Samarasinghe asked the media to contact External Affairs Minister Prof. G. L. Peiris for information about the present situation of the UNHRC investigation.

Asked to comment on the preparations being made for the next UNHRC session in his capacity as the Special Envoy of the Sri Lankan President on Human Rights, Samarasinghe said he no longer held that post.

Samarasinghe said that he was only the Minister of Plantation Industries and, therefore, could not comment on the issue.

Asked for his personal opinion of former UNHRC Chief Navaneetham Pillay’s retirement from the post, Samarasinghe said; "My personal opinion is not important to you and this media conference was organised to talk about the developments in the plantation sector."

Minister Samarasinghe earlier attended the UNHRC sessions as the Sri Lankan President’s Special Envoy on Human Rights.

Hiring PR Firms And Our Public Relations Will Not Be Able To Help Us


Colombo Telegraph
By Rajiva Wijesinha -September 2, 2014
Prof. Rajiva Wijesinha MP
Prof. Rajiva Wijesinha MP
A Presidency Under Threat – Public Relations
Much has been reported recently about the various Public Relations firms government – or rather elements in government, since it seems that there has been no Cabinet approval for these ventures – have hired to raise our profile in countries which seem hostile to us. There have been a host of such firms in the United States, and one in Britain. The first lot were almost all arranged through our Embassy in Washington, whilst Bell Pottinger, which also works in the United States though it is essentially a British firm, was arranged by Nivard Ajith Cabraal, the Governor of the Central Bank. More recently it seems Mr Cabraal has also been instrumental in arranging yet another firm in America.
The reports are very critical of those who make these arrangements, but I believe there is need of some discrimination here. I cannot defend the earlier agencies in America, for I found the only two I was introduced to, way back when I headed the Peace Secretariat, to be both naïve and incompetent. One of them had a young Sri Lankan who seemed to have initiated the relationship, but he was almost as ignorant as the large American he brought with him. Given the manner in which our Embassy in Washington conducted business, that being the operative word it seems, I believe there should be thorough investigation of what happened.
It is also worth noting that our relations with the United States deteriorated significantly during this period. Hiring of such firms began in the time of the Bush administration, which was relatively positive about us. The excessive expenditure then that our Ambassador in Washington was incurring was culpably unnecessary. More bizarrely, when the Obama administration took over, he continued to work with agencies that had good Republican connections.
                                                                           Read More   

Gota checkmated by Judiciary


lankaturthTUESDAY, 02 SEPTEMBER 2014
Panadura Magistrate Ruchira Weliwatta has stated that the judiciary is not bound to give orders merely because the Urban Development Authority has made a request.
“The Judiciary has authority to look into whether the request made is just, fair and whether legal steps have been taken. As such, the Judiciary is not bound to give orders merely because requests have been made,” the Magistrate has emphasized.
The Magistrate has made this statement annulling two cases filed by the UDA against the construction of a building by ASB group in Panadura town.
At present the UDA, using its powers is taking over valuable lands all over the island, existing constructions are being demolished and lands seized deploying security forces. Defense Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa using his political power is directing the illegal moves.

Man self-immolates in Colpetty

Man self-immolates in ColpettyMan self-immolates in ColpettySeptember 2, 2014 
logoA 60-year-old person has self-immolated in front of the Colpetty Police station, a short while ago.

The victim was identified as a resident of Kalalgoda area in Thalawathugoda. The police Media Unit told Ada Derana that the person has set himself on fire after pouring a bottle of petrol. According to the police, the reason behind the self-immolation is still unknown.    

The person has been ruched to the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) of the Colombo National Hospital for treatments.

UNP office in Buttala attacked - CaFFE


ele 2ele 1







The election office of opposition leader of Buttala pradesheeya sabha and United National Party (UNP) Moneragala district provincial council candidate Wijesinghe Herath Mudiyanselage Dharmasena has been attacked in the early hours of today (September 2.) With this incident the number of attacked election offices of the opposition parties have reached 55. Although there are over 200 legal and illegal election offices of United Peoples Freedom Alliance (UPFA) in Moneragala, it is only the offices of UNP and Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) that have been attacked.

Not a single person has been arrested in connection with the continuous election violence and violations in Moneragala and it is suspicious that not a single policemen is in the vicinity when these attacks are carried out. Opposition activists claim that gunmen travelling in unmarked vehicles and those with garage numbers carry out these nocturnal attacks with impunity.
Attached herewith is a photo of a Defender Jeep with a garage number plate parked in Kataragama on September 1 around 5.10 pm.
Meanwhile an election office of UNP chief ministerial candidate Harin Fernando at Nelumgama Badulla was attacked on the same day.
Out of the 164 complaints 120 have been received from Moneragala district while 35 are from Badulla. Nine are common to both districts.
(Attached photos - Defender Jeep with a garage number plate parked in Kataragama, destroyed offices of Dharmasena and Fernando.)

BBC Sacks “Sandeshaya” Senior Producer Bandara


Colombo Telegraph
September 2, 2014
Chandana Keerthi Bandara, a senior producer of the BBC World Service’s Sinhala section has been sacked on charges of harassment and bullying, Colombo Telegraph reliably learns.
Bandara
Bandara
The BBC World Service spokesman, Paul Rasmussen refused to give further details, but did not deny the story.
According to inside sources, Chandana Keerthi Bandara has been sacked a few days ago by the BBC, after four controversial recruits made official complaints against him. Itssuspended editor Priyath Liyanage, staff members Saroj Pathirana and Thisara Aravinda Rathuwithana from Sinhala Service “Sandeshaya” and Jeyapragash Nallusamy from Tamil Service had made the complaints against Bandara.
Colombo Telegraph has been unable to reach Chandana Keerthi Bandara for comment.
Early this year the National Union of Journalists (NUJ) has called for a new approach towards bullying and harassment at the BBC. Addressed to director general of the BBC Tony Hall a motion backed by union members at the BBC follows an investigation into harassment and bullying. Dinah Rose QC was brought in to lead the investigation and make recommendations, which she published in a report in May.
Following Colombo Telegraph’s exposure of the issue of applying Sri Lanka government’s interest free loans, the BBC had to discipline Chandana Keerthi Bandara, Priyath Liyanage  and Elmo Fernando by compelling all three of them to undergo a training program on journalistic ethics.

Basil comes down to ‘2.7’


lankaturthTUESDAY, 02 SEPTEMBER 2014
The number of recipient families of the loan scheme, suddenly put forward by Minister Basil Rajapaksa while President Mahinda Rajapaksa was away in the USA, has been brought down to 2.7 million suddenly. ‘Dinamina’ had revealed that 5 million families would benefit from the loan scheme.
JVP in many instances including TV programmes, pointed out that government’s false development could be adjudged from the number of families who had no ability to get a small amount of Rs.5000 to Rs.50,000 as a loan without such a scheme.  They asked whether it was the ‘miracle’ the government was boasting about.
The government, that got upset over this, has taken steps to change the statistics.  An article in today’s (2nd) ‘Dinamina’ states 2.7 million families would be benefited from the Divi Neguma Sahana Arana’  programme.

PS chairman’s brother arrested over illegal tree felling

PS chairman’s brother arrested over illegal tree felling logo
September 2, 2014
The brother of Nagoda Pradeshiya Sabha chairman, Hemachandra Walegama has been arrested in connection with the illegal felling of trees at a reserve in the Nagoda area, police said.

It is said that the timber had been taken away by a certain group on Sunday (31) despite a directive from the Divisional Secretariat banning the transport of the illegally felled trees, according to a complaint made by residents in the area. 

However, the stock of timber was later found at a saw mill in the Yatalamattha area.

Udugama Police are conducting further investigations.  

Bharat’s Pradhan Sevak

September 2, 2014  
Modi speaks on India’s 67th Independence Day
Politicians, especially populist ones, campaign in poetry and govern with prose. Most times it with a repressive and harsh prose that they govern. This has not happened yet in India, but in the build-up to the traditional address to the nation from the ramparts of Delhi’s 17th century Mughal era Red Fort, the feeling was that the inspiring poetry of the Modi tsunami, which swept the cow belt in Bharat and showed a strong performance in other areas to enable the BJP to have an absolute majority in India’s lower house of Parliament, was fast turning into dull prose.
Thai refugee detention centres 'brutal' for children says HRW
02 September 2014
Detention facilities in Thailand for refugees are "no place for children", said the New York based rights organisation, Human Rights Watch, in a report - 'Two Years with No Moon' - published Monday.


Condemning Thailand's arbitrary detention of thousands of children in overcrowded and dangerous conditions as "brutal", HRW called on Thailand to "immediately cease detention of children for reasons of their immigration status".

The facilities, which predominantly house Rohingya asylum seekers, also include over 2000 refugees who have fled non-neighbouring countries, including Sri Lanka."Thailand’s use of immigration detention violates children’s rights, immediately risks their health and wellbeing, and imperils their development. Wretched conditions place children in filthy, overcrowded cells without adequate nutrition, education, or exercise space. Prolonged detention deprives children of the capacity to mentally and physically grow and thrive," HRW said.

"Immigration detention in Thailand violates the rights of both adults and children. Migrants are often detained indefinitely; they lack reliable mechanisms to appeal their deprivation of liberty; and information about the duration of their detention is often not released to members of their family. Such indefinite detention without recourse to judicial review amounts to arbitrary detention prohibited under international law," it added.

The report, which includes extracts of interviews with refugee children, details the plight of a young girl aged 8 to 10, named Bhavani, who fled Sri Lanka.

See here for full report.

Extract from Bhavani's story published below:

"When Bhavani’s mother, Mathy, learned that her husband and daughters had been arrested, she was shocked. “I just thought I should surrender,” she told Human Rights Watch. “I wasn’t able to leave four of my girls in the IDC alone.” Mathy voluntarily reported to a court, where the judge ordered her to pay a 6,000 baht (about US$200) fine for being in the country without a visa, then let her surrender and join her daughters in the IDC. In the two days they were apart, Mathy said, “I felt like I was dreaming. I wasn’t able to sleep, I’d hear them talking like they were calling me, knocking at the door.” 

When the sisters and their father reached the IDC—two days before Mathy arrived—the 
police separated the girls from their father and sent them to different holding cells. The girls were initially held in a large hall with many adults. “When they took our dad away from us, we started to cry. That’s when I realized we couldn’t get out of there,” said Amanthi, Bhavani’s sister, who was 12 at the time. “When I saw them there,” said Mathy, “I was so scared.” 

After a few days, Mathy and her four daughters were moved to the cell where they would spend the next two years. The cell was overcrowded, sometimes with over 100 occupants. 

People were “sleeping all on top of each other, so crowded even right up to the toilet,” said Amanthi. “At some point we couldn’t sit.” Mathy said she coped as best she could, but one of my sons was never arrested. It was really difficult. I wanted to be in the IDC with my girls, but I missed my second son.” He could not visit without risking arrest himself. 

Because of the detention center’s policy of holding males in one cell and females in 
another, without chances to visit, the family was separated, despite being in the same facility. They were only brought together when a charity group visited once or twice per month and asked to see the whole family. “When Bhavani wanted to meet my dad or brother,” said Amanthi, “she’d really cry.”

Crammed in their cigarette smoke-filled, fetid permanent cell, the girls saw their health and education suffer. Bhavani developed a rash all over her body, but Mathy said the medication the IDC’s clinic gave her did not help. The toilets—just three for the hundred or so migrants held there—were filthy, and Bhavani’s teenage sister avoided using them because there were no doors. Though the International Organization for Migration ran a small daycare center that the girls could attend once or twice a week, there was no school.“I worried that my girls’ education stopped,” said Mathy. 

Fights often broke out between women in the overcrowded cell, frustrated by their indefinite detention. “When someone behaved badly to other people, I didn’t like that,” said Bhavani. “They would shout at night.” The guards would not do very much when fighting started, and the girls would hide, explained Amanthi. “The [other migrants] are really, really strong. My mom didn’t know how to fight, she tried to take us to a corner and protect us. It was scary.”
Human Rights Council requests the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights to urgently dispatch a mission to Iraq 
Requests the Mission to Investigate Alleged Violations and Abuses Committed by the so-called Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant and Associated Terrorist Groups 


OHCHR header1 September 2014
The Human Rights Council this afternoon concluded its Special Session on the human rights situation in Iraq in the light of abuses committed by the so-called Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) and associated groups, after adopting a resolution in which it requested the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights to urgently dispatch a mission to Iraq to investigate alleged violations and abuses of international human rights law committed by the so-called Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant and associated terrorist groups, and to establish the facts and circumstances of such abuses and violations, with a view to avoiding impunity and ensuring full accountability.
Human Rights Council Requests the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights to Urgently Dispatch a M... by Thavam Ratna
Ebola: Six 'high risk' passengers from west Africa quarantined at Delhi airport


PTI | Sep 1, 2014, 09.22PM IST
NEW DELHI: Six people deemed "high risk" Ebola suspects were on Monday admitted to a quarantine facility at Delhi airport, health ministry said. 

The suspects were among 181 passengers who arrived in India from the affected western African countries.

READ ALSO: 6 passengers isolated at Delhi airport over Ebola fears 

As of today, the ministry said, as many as 816 passengers were being tracked by authorities under Integrated Disease Surveillance Programme. 

These passengers are those who carried certain risk because of suspicion that they might have come in touch with Ebola victims and are being monitored to ensure that they are attended to in case they develop symptoms of the dangerous disease. 

"Report has been received from state IDSP units of 18 of the 20 states about 80 passengers being monitored. One passenger, who is being tracked and monitored in West Bengal has confirmed to be having Malaria...," it said. 

The control room in the ministry of health and family Welfare has received 706 calls since its inception on August 9 and only five calls were received in the past 24 hours, it said. 

Most of the callers have sought information on signs and symptoms of the disease and travel related risk of acquiring the infection. 

View image on Twitter
The deadliest ever outbreak of Ebola is heading for Africa's teeming cities http://ind.pn/1nOC6kt 
More than 1,500 people have died across West Africa from Ebola. Liberia has suffered the most deaths in the outbreak that has hit five west African countries. 


READ ALSO: 116 people arrive from worst-affected Liberia in Delhi and Mumbai

Arbitrary Detention - Asian Legal Resource Centre


asian legal resource centreArbitrary arrest and detention take place in large numbers in most Asian countries, both under ordinary laws and anti-terrorism laws.

In Indonesia, the law allows any person arrested for any crime to be detained for 90 days in police custody without access to a judicial officer. Over the last five years or so, there has been considerable agitation for the abolition of this law and for the enactment of provisions that give a definite period within which suspects should be produced before a court, with a judicial officer thereafter determining the justification of further detention. The previous government encouraged discussion on law reform in order to abolish this law, which is a product of the military regime of General Suharto. However, no measures have been taken to introduce a new law to the Indonesian legislature. As a result, many persons arrested on petty charges have been detained for the entire 90-day period.
Human rights organisations have consistently criticized the existing law for many reasons. One reason is that it creates avenues for exploitation of detention by police officers that wish to make corrupt gains. Prolonged detention also creates possibilities for torture and ill-treatment of suspects. During a three-month period, many of the scars from torture disappear. As a result, when a suspect following their detention makes a complaint of torture, the alleged perpetrators have the advantage of the claim that there is hardly any physical evidence to support such an allegation.
However, the greatest objection to the law on detention in Indonesia is that the police are placed in a higher position than the courts in deciding matters relating to arrest and detention. The superior position that the police hold within the system is an obstacle to the development of a public justice system based on the principles of the separation of powers and independence of the judiciary. As it is the aspiration of the Indonesian people and government to achieve democratic reforms, establishing the superiority of the judiciary vis-à-vis the police is one of the major issues requiring attention.
In many Asian countries, the legal criteria that only justifies arrest on the basis of adequate evidence that allows for reasonable suspicion of the arrestee being involved in a crime, has lost significance. For various reasons, such as the courts being overloaded with work, meticulous examination of the justifiability and legality of an arrest is often neglected. Given the extreme limitations on access to competent lawyers, possibilities of challenging arbitrary arrest and detention is often not within the capacity of litigants, in particular those from the lower income groups. Arrest and detention without proper scrutiny can lead to manipulation of the situation by police officers (who, in developing countries, hold considerable social power) in order to force suspects to plead guilty to crimes they have never committed. Without reforms of the public justice system and the creation of opportunities for suspects to challenge the grounds of their arrest and detention, miscarriages of justice will recur.
Of particular importance is the abuse of anti-terrorism laws, which provide for longer than normal periods of detention without trial. There are hardly any mechanisms for the immediate examination of the legality of such arrests and demands of keeping suspects in prolonged detention. Social and psychological factors militate against suspects who are arrested and detained for alleged offences under anti-terrorism laws. However, hardly any Asian countries have the possibility for a quick review of reports filed by the executive with participation from competent lawyers on behalf of the suspects. It is likely that torture and ill-treatment will be used for the purpose of gathering information from suspects. Often, guilt or innocence is measured by the outcome of the use of torture and ill-treatment.
The Pakistan Protection Ordinance, which was promulgated in June 2014, needs special mention. This law gives greater powers to law enforcement authorities to enter and search premises without a warrant, and to confiscate property without permission from any lawful authority. Under the Anti-Terrorism Act of 1997, amended since, law enforcement authorities are provided powers to detain suspects for up to three months and to allow conviction on the basis of incriminating text messages, phone calls, and emails. It further grants powers to shoot on sight. And, it allows for telephone and Internet facilities to be tapped and monitored.
Due to the political manipulation that surrounds issues relating to arrest and detention, particularly with regard to anti-terrorism, judicial officers often harbor sympathies for those filing charges than rather than the suspects. Even in ordinary cases, when the charges are petty, the court extends sympathy to the government agencies filing charges. In this manner, the primary obligation of courts -- to defend the individual's liberty against the power of the state -- is undermined, as witnessed in recent decades.
The Asian Legal Resource Centre respectfully submits that illegal arrest and detention require the attention of the Human Rights Council, and that the Council, with the cooperation of Member States, needs to develop better criteria to ascertain culpability of suspects detained under anti-terrorism or other similar laws.

Iraqi forces regain control of key road to Baghdad after breaking siege

Fighters make progress after breaking Isis hold on Amerli but relatives demand answers about fate of soldiers left behind
Iraqi Shia militia fighters celebrate breaking the siege of Amerli. Photograph: Reuters
Iraqi Shia militia fighters celebrate breaking the siege of Amerli
The Guardian homeAgence France-Presse in Amerli
Tuesday 2 September 2014
Iraqi forces have made further advances in their fightback against jihadis while hundreds of people have stormed parliament over the fate of missing soldiers who surrendered in June.
Having broken a months-long jihadi siege of the Shia Turkoman town of Amerli by Islamic State (Isis) fighters, troops on Tuesday regained control of part of a key highway linking Baghdad to the north.
Two towns north of Amerli were also taken from the jihadis on Monday as Iraqi forces – backed by US air strikes – scored their first major victories since the army's collapse across much of the north in June.
The collapse left some 1,700 soldiers in jihadi hands, with many believed to have been executed.
Demanding to know their fates, angry relatives stormed the parliament in Baghdad, attacked MPs and began a sit-in in its main chamber, an official said.
Riot police were trying to evict the protesters, who were also calling for some officers to be held accountable, said the official, who was there.
Concern over those in jihadi hands has been fuelled by reports of widespread atrocities, including accusations from Amnesty International of war crimes and ethnic cleansing.
Isis declared an Islamic caliphate in regions under its control in Iraq and Syria after it swept through much of the Sunni Arab heartland north of Baghdad in June and then stormed minority Christian and Yazidi Kurdish areas.
Isis has carried out beheadings, crucifixions and public stonings, and on Tuesday Amnesty accused it of "war crimes, including mass summary killings and abductions" in areas it controls.
"The massacres and abductions being carried out by Islamic State provide harrowing new evidence that a wave of ethnic cleansing against minorities is sweeping across northern Iraq," said its senior crisis response adviser, Donatella Rovera.
The UN Human Rights Council unanimously agreed to send an emergency mission to Iraq to investigate Isis atrocities, after a senior UN official said the jihadi group had carried out "acts of inhumanity on an unimaginable scale".
Concern over the scale of the humanitarian crisis helped prompt limited US air strikes in support of Iraqi forces, Shia militia and Kurdish troops battling the jihadis.
Such strikes were used in the area during the Amerli operation – the first time Washington has expanded its more than three-week air campaign against Isis outside the north.
Desperate residents rushed to receive aid deliveries after Iraqi forces moved into the town, scrambling to grab food and bottles of water from trucks.
A day after seizing Amerli, troops and Shia militiamen on Monday retook Sulaiman Bek and Yankaja, two towns to its north that had been important militant strongholds.
Army Staff Lieutenant General Abdulamir al-Zaidi said they had continued the advance on Tuesday, regaining control of a stretch of the main highway to the north which had been closed by the militants for almost three months.
A senior militia commander said it would be several days before the road reopened as sappers needed to clear it of mines and booby traps planted by the retreating militants.
The US said it launched four air strikes in the Amerli area, effectively supporting operations involving militia forces that previously fought against US troops in Iraq.
The government's reliance on Shia militiamen in this and other operations risks entrenching groups which themselves have a history of brutal sectarian killings.
David Petraeus, a former commander-in-chief of US-led forces in Iraq, has warned against the US becoming an "air force for Shia militias".
But worries over the rise of Isis seem to outweigh other concerns, with western leaders warning the group posed a security risk far outside the areas under its control.
Australia's prime minister, Tony Abbott, on Tuesday said that "extreme force" was justified against Isis militants, describing them as worse than Nazis or Communists.
"As soon as they've done something gruesome and ghastly and unspeakable, they're advertising it on the internet for all to see, which makes them, in my mind, nothing but a death cult," Abbott said.
Fiji, meanwhile, revealed that Al-Qaida-linked Syrian rebels who are holding 45 UN peacekeepers hostage in the Golan Heights are demanding they be expunged from a UN terror blacklist.
The Fijians, part of the UN Disengagement Observer Force (UNDOF), were captured last Wednesday when Al-Nusra Front rebels stormed a Golan Heights crossing.
Another group of 75 Philippine peacekeepers refused to surrender and eventually escaped from two camps on the Syrian side of the demarcation line after the rebels besieged them.
Fiji's army chief, Mosese Tikoitoga, said a UN team had arrived in the Golan Heights from New York to take over negotiations for their release.
"Unfortunately we have not made any improvement in the situation, our troops remain at an undisclosed location, the rebels are not telling us where they are," Tikoitoga said, adding that the hostage takers also want humanitarian aid for areas they control and compensation for wounded fighters.

US targets leader of al-Shabaab with Somalia drone strike



Fox News - Fair & BalancedA U.S. drone targeted the leader of the Al Qaeda-linked al-Shabaab group in a strike in southern Somalia on Monday, a senior U.S. defense official told Fox News.
Officially, Pentagon Press Secretary John Kirby would not confirm that the strike, the results of which are still being assessed, had been successful. 
"We are assessing the results of the operation and will provide additional information as and when appropriate," he said in a statement. There was no immediate comment from al-Shabaab. 
A senior Somali official, speaking on condition of anonymity, also told The Associated Press that a U.S. drone targeted al-Shabaab leader Ahmed Abdi Godane as he left a meeting of the group's top leaders. The official told AP that intelligence indicated Godane "might have been killed along with other militants." 
Godane, also known as Mukhtar Abu Zubeyr, is the group's spiritual leader under whose direction the Somali militants forged an alliance with Al Qaeda.
The official said that the strike took place in a forest near Sablale district, 105 miles south of Mogadishu, where the group trains its fighters. The governor of Somalia's Lower Shabelle region, Abdiqadir Mohamed Nor, told The Associated Press that as government and African Union forces were heading to a town in Sablale district, they heard something that sounded like an "earthquake" as drones struck al-Shabaab bases.
"There was an airstrike near Sablale, we saw something," Nor said.
After the U.S. strike Monday night, masked Islamic militants arrested dozens of residents suspected of spying for the U.S. and searched nearby homes, a resident said.
"Mass arrests just started, everyone is being detained," said Mohamed Ali, who lives in Sablale district. "They even searched nearby jungles and stopped the nomads transporting milk and grass to the towns for questioning."
The U.S. has carried out several airstrikes in Somalia recent years.
A U.S. missile strike in January killed a high-ranking intelligence officer for al-Shabab, and last October a vehicle carrying senior members of the group was hit in a U.S. strike that killed al-Shabab's top explosives expert.
The U.S. action comes after Somalia's government forces regained control of a high security prison in the capital that was attacked Sunday by seven heavily armed suspected Islamic militants who attempted to free other extremists held there. The Pentagon statement did not indicate whether the U.S. action was related to the prison attack.
Somali officials said all attackers, three government soldiers and two civilians were killed. Mogadishu's Godka Jilacow prison is an interrogation center for Somalia's intelligence agency, and many suspected militants are believed to be held in underground cells there.
The Somali rebel group al-Shabaab, which is linked to Al Qaeda, claimed responsibility for the attack that shattered a period of calm in Mogadishu after two decades of chaotic violence. The attack started when a suicide car bomber detonated an explosives-laden vehicle at the gate of the prison, followed by gunmen who fought their way into the prison.
It was al-Shabaab gunmen who attacked the upscale Westgate Mall in Nairobi, Kenya, with guns and grenades last September, killing at least 67 people. Al-Shabaab had threatened retaliation against Kenya for sending troops into Somalia against the extremists. Godane said the attack was carried out in retaliation for the West's support for Kenya's Somalia invasion and the "interest of their oil companies."
Al Shabaab is now mostly active in Somalia's rural regions, after being ousted from the capital by African Union forces in 2011. But the group is still able to launch lethal attacks -- often involving militants on suicide missions -- within Mogadishu, the seat of government.
Somali military officials last week launched a military operation to oust al-Shabab from its last remaining bases in the southern parts of Somalia.  However, on Saturday the town of Bulomarer, which is about 70 miles south of Mogadishu, was seized from militants after hours of fighting.
Fox News' Justin Fishel and The Associated Press contributed to this report.