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Yusuf Tallan

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General

Yusuf Tallan
Nickname(s)Tallan
AllegianceSomalia Federal Government of Somalia
Service/branchSomali National Army
RankGeneral
Commands heldChief of Army

General Talan or General Yuusuf Talan or just Yuusuf Talan, (Somali: General Yusuf Tallan, Arabic: جنرال يوسف تلن), was a General of the SNA, the Somali National Army.[1]

Biography[edit]

Talan was a native of the Awdal region of Somaliland and a member of the Musafin (Musafiin), Habr 'Affan (Habar Cafaan) section of the Gadabursi (Gadabuursi) clan. In his early years as career soldier who loved his profession. Trained at Sandhurst, Britain, he returned to the Somali Republic in the early sixties. Henceforth, his life went hand in glove with the fledgling Somali State and he served it with dignity, dedication and selflessness. He went through the ranks of the military till he reached the highest echelon of the Somali military hierarchy. A ceremony was held at the Center of the Military officers in Mogadishu to formalize it. The military officers there welcomed him with a five-minute standing ovation.[2][better source needed]

During the regime of Siad Barre he was a brigadier-general.[3]

Death[edit]

In October 2000 in Mogadishu, unidentified men shot and killed Yusuf Tallan, He was shot after he refused to get into a vehicle with the men. The killing was linked to warlord Osman Ali Atto because of Atto's business deals in the north and the possibility of a deal between Somaliland President Egal and Atto to destabilize the south. General Galal, chairman of the National Security Committee, was also linked to the killing; there was suspicion that he might have killed Tallan to prevent him from becoming head of the National Security Committee. Tallan had been named as the head of a committee to oversee the demobilization of the country's militias. In December 2000, the President of Somalia announced that the police had arrested Tallan's alleged killers with foreign assistance.[4]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Delegate to Djibouti process killed in Mogadishu". The New Humanitarian. October 19, 2000.
  2. ^ "inauthor:"United Nations. Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights" - Google Search". www.google.nl.
  3. ^ Country Report: Ethiopia, Eritrea, Somalia, Djibouti - Pagina 84
  4. ^ "Somalia". US State Department. Retrieved 1 June 2024.Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.