He also did as such in a summoning letter to Somali clans:[1] I also inform you that I am a pilgrim and a holy fighter and have no wish to gain power and greatness in this world: neither am I of the Dolbahanta, the Warsangeli, the Mijjertein, nor the Ogaden.
And I am not of the hypocrites; I am a Dervish, hoping for God’s mercy and consent and forgiveness and guidance, and I desire that all the country and the Moslems may be victorious by God’s garace.As such, this makes Kaladi Madlay the most senior ranked avowed Ogaden in the Darawiish.
It is impossible to estimate the Mullah's present strength.A March 1903 telegram from the British Aden colony stated that most of the Sayid's followers were of the Dhulbahante tribe, that Madlay commanded the Darawiish cavalry, and that Madlay may have opted to abandon the Darawiish prior to the 1903 Battle of Agaarweyne between the European colonizers and Darawiish which would have resulted in his fellow Ogaden deserting too.
It is reported that the Keladi Madlay, ... commanding the Mullah's horsemen, intends to desert, and if this proves true, then he will take with him most of his followersThe telegram also states that the British downplayed the cost of the anti-Darawiish expedition and that the British supplies came via Hobyo and Berbera.
The subsequent Agaarweyne battle resulted in a decisive victory for the Darawiish with the entire British force as well as their African and Asian levies being destroyed.