Issue 389
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TABU BUTAGIRA
Kampala, July 11, 2009 – Ugandan troops in Mogadishu have been secretly
selling guns and ammunition to Somalia’s struggling Transitional Federal
Government on behalf of the United States government, Daily Monitor can
reveal.
Explaining American assistance to the TFG during a recent press briefing
to US journalists in Washington, D.C., a top US State Department
official said Uganda has been supplying arms to Somali troops and
picking dollars from Washington.
“We have gone to the Ugandans when the TFG (Transitional Federal
Government) has run short of weapons and ammunition and told the
Ugandans to provide what TFG needs,” the official, who was not named in
the partly classified June 26 briefing, said.
“When the Ugandans provide those weapons, they give us a bill and an
accounting for what they have turned over [to Somali government] and we
then give them the money to replace the stores and the arms.”
The official said the UPDF has mostly supplied small arms and ammunition
and had increased its supplies in May when Somali Islamic extremists
increased their attacks on the TFG and government forces.
The UPDF, which is in Somalia as part of an African Union peacekeeping
force to the country, is said to have been paid up to $10 million
(Shs21b) for arming and training the TFG fighting force. This is the
first time the arms-for-cash deal is being made public and the
revelations could mean that the UPDF was violating the neutral terms of
its peacekeeping mandate by arming one of the combatants.
Authorities in Kampala were quick to denounce the revelations as “a
lie”. Lt. Gen. Katumba Wamala, the commander of the UPDF Land Forces,
who has been overseeing the deployment of Ugandan troops to help
stabilize Mogadishu, told Daily Monitor that “it is Washington that is
giving the arms to Somalia. “The only thing we have done is to be the
link to pass those weapons to TFG because the Americans cannot be on the
ground to do this themselves.”
President Museveni told journalists at a press conference earlier this
month that it was fine for the US to arm Somalis to fend off a rebel
onslaught on the capital. “These people fighting in Somalia are wasting
their time,” President Museveni said at the time. “What a democrat
should do in Somalia is allow peace and demand elections.” Details of
the arms-for-cash deal emerged as the beleaguered Somali President
Sheikh Ahmed Sheikh Sheriff met Mr Museveni in Kampala.
According to a State House statement, the two leaders discussed
bilateral issues concerning the two countries and reviewed the situation
in Somalia and other regional matters. The US State Department official
said that the UPDF had supplied small arms and limited munitions but
“not artillery pieces, armored vehicles or tanks” to the TFG soldiers.
“These are weapons that would be used in an urban environment, fighting
a counter-guerrilla insurgency,” the official said, “We have provided
funds for the purchase of weapons; and have asked the two units that are
there [in Mogadishu], particularly the Ugandans, to provide weapons to
the TFG, and we have backfilled the Ugandans for what they have provided
to the TFG government.”
Shadow Defense Minister Mr Angiro Gutmoi (FDC; Erute North) said he was
not aware of the arms-for-cash deal but said such a transaction is “not
authorized by the Ugandan Parliament”. The Defense and Army spokesman,
Maj. Felix Kulayigye, said the UPDF is only involved in training the
Somali forces and securing vital state installations. “I am not aware of
what the Americans are talking about and I don’t believe in telling
lies.”
Uganda and Burundi have more than 4,000 troops deployed in Somalia under
Amisom. The heavily undermanned and underfunded peacekeeping force is
meant to secure the Presidential Palace, air and sea ports and the
city’s main roads but has come under increasing attacks from Islamic
extremists.
The government has defended its deployment in Somalia saying instability
in that country, which has not had a functioning government in almost
two decades, undermines security in the whole region.
In March, an Ilyushin-76 plane, suspected to be ferrying arms for Amisom
troops in Mogadishu, crashed shortly after takeoff from Entebbe airport,
killing all 11 people on board; three of them top Burundian army
officers.
The manifest of the cargo aircraft, chartered by Dynacorp, an American
company, shows the carrier was ferrying at least 16 tones of military
supplies. The army said then that the plane was carrying mainly tents
and water purifiers although the plane’s owner claimed it had been shot
down. The claims have not been verified. Transport Minister John
Nasasira said last evening that an investigative team led by Col. (rtd)
Chris Mudoola is yet to complete its work after failing to locate the
plane’s flight data recorder.
Source: Daily Monitor
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