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Issue 519/ 7th - 13th Jan 2012

Front Page

Somaliland News

News Headlines

Somaliland: End Forced Return Of Refugees

Somalia: Ethiopian Troops 'To Hand Over To AU Force'

Amnesty International - Somali Man Detained In United Arab Emirates: Boqor Osman Mohamoud

Local and Regional Affairs

Amid Tensions, U.S. Navy Rescues Iranians From Somali Pirates

MANKATO, MN: Somali High School Student Wins Pathfinder Awards

Paris Signs New Defense Agreement With Djibouti

London Takes Hard Look At Somali Piracy

Somali PM Visits Newly-Retaken Town, Praises Army

Waayaha Cusub: Rappers Against Terrorism

AU Asks UN To Increase Peacekeeping Force In Somalia To 17,700

Editorial

Factionalism And Somaliland’s Political System

Features & Commentary

All Reconstruction Is Local: Using Local Governance To Bring Peace To Postconflict Countries - Part V

Somaliland: Rebuilding Shattered Lives, One Home At A Time

Post-Conflict Libya And Iraq Should Now Wage War On Diabetes And Heart Disease

My Adventure Travel Year: A Look Back And A Look Forward

London 2012 Olympics: Mo Farah's Fears Realized As Kenenisa Bekele Declares Himself Fully Fit For Medal Bid

International News

Opinion

Finding Their Feet Slowly: A Look At The Struggles And Successes Of The New And Growing Somali Community In The Republic Of Ireland

Analysis: The International Situation Is Favoring The Recognition Of The Republic Of Somaliland

 

Kenya Says Kills 50 Shabaab Fighters In Airstrikes

Nairobi, Kenya, January 7, 2012 - Kenyan jets bombed an al Shabaab camp in southern Somalia Friday killing 50 fighters of the rebel group and injuring 60 others, its military spokesman said.

Emmanuel Chirchir told Reuters the fighters of the al Qaeda-linked al Shabaab group at the camp situated south of Garbahare had been planning to attack Kenyan and Somali troops in two nearby towns captured by Kenyan forces this week.

"This is one of the biggest losses to the al Shabaab. The concentration of fighters was believed to be preparing to attack our troops in Fafadun and Elade," Chirchir said.

Kenya sent troops into neighboring Somalia last October after a string of kidnappings and cross-border attacks it blamed on the militants and which threatened Kenya's tourism industry.

The militants pose one of the biggest threats to stability in east Africa, encouraging the African Union, which has peacekeeping forces in the Somali capital Mogadishu, to extend the peacekeeping mandate and to request the United Nations bolster the force's size to close to 18,000.

The Kenyan military said it took over the town of Fafadun in a battle which killed three militants as well as Elade, both of which are in the southwestern Gedo region.

Al Shabaab confirmed the air raid through a senior official who did not wish to be named. It said it had ambushed Kenyan and Somali government troops who were on their way to Elade, killing 10, mainly Somalis.

After initial advances, Kenya's troops, who are fighting alongside Somali government forces, have been largely bogged down due to heavy rains.

It has instead relied on air strikes in areas where al Shabaab has a presence in the south of the country, but the end of the rainy season has seen a dramatic escalation in the number of villages taken over by Kenyan, Somali and Ethiopian forces.

Elade resident Abdiwahab Ali said Kenyan and Somali troops had moved heavy armoured vehicles into the town.

"Al Shabaab left for Baardhere after three days of fighting outside Elade. The city is now calm but people have not opened business yet," he said. Baardhere is the last major stronghold for al Shabaab in Gedo.

Chirchir had told Reuters earlier that the capture of Baardhere will ensure than the "entire Gedo region will be under the control of friendly forces."

REBELS VOW FIERCE ATTACKS

Al Shabaab denied Kenya could capture all of Gedo.

"Should Kenya keep on advancing toward us, we swear we shall enter Kenya," Shabaab spokesman Abdiasis Abu Musab said.

"Let them boast of going deeper into Somalia. They will see al Shabaab behind them and fierce fighting and attacks in Kenyan towns," Abu Musab told Reuters Friday.

Last week, Ethiopian forces captured Baladwayne in the central Hiiran region, opening a new front against al Shabaab, which has been waging an insurgency against Somalia's Western-backed government since 2007.

AU Peace and Security Council head Ramtane Lamamra said as a military force, al Shabaab was being "systematically and steadily destroyed."

"They have been defeated in Mogadishu, they are being defeated in the Gedo and Juba regions and the same happened in Baladwayne," he told reporters in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa late Thursday.

So far, Burundi and Uganda make up the current AMISOM force, Djibouti is sending a contingent and Kenyan soldiers intend to join as well. That would mean the peacekeepers can extend their capabilities beyond the capital, most of which is under the control of African and Somali government troops.

"The overall strategy is to reduce al Shabaab's effectiveness to wage any meaningful fight," Chirchir said.

"In doing so we are using intelligence on all their locations, intentions and immediate operations to hit them while in that planning phase so we ensure they can't carry out any attack," he said.

Since Kenyan forces moved into Somalia, at least 30 people, including several policemen have been killed in attacks in the northeastern Kenyan districts of Wajir, Mandera and Garissa, attacks that Kenya has blamed on the militants.

Thursday, Kenyan police seized explosive equipment in the Dadaab refugee camp near the Somali border, calling it a major breakthrough in their investigation into the attacks.

(Additional reporting by Feisal Omar in Mogadishu and Aaron Maasho in Addis Ababa; Writing by Yara Bayoumy)

Source: Reuters




 


 


 




 




 



 




 


 



 



 

 


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