Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Al-Shaabab claims attack on AU peacekeepers in Mogadishu

Somalia’s hardline insurgent group Al-Shaabab claimed responsibility Tuesday for a mortar attack on an African Union (AU) peacekeepers’ base in Mogadishu that left several people dead. On Monday, a mortar round crashed into a group of Somali civilians queuing up at one of the entrances of the AU’s peacekeeping mission (AMISOM) to receive medical treatment from the force’s doctors.

“The attack on the compound of the African infidels was carried out by our mujahedins [holy warriors]. It was a successful attack which left many of the enemy doctors dead,” Al-Shaabab spokesman Sheikh Ali Mohamoud Rage told AFP.

Officials on the base said at least one Ugandan peacekeeper was killed in the blast. They added that several Somali civilians may have died but could not provide an accurate count.

A civilian source on the base said a total of five people had been killed.

The hardline Islamist insurgent group Al-Shaabab – an organization whose leader recently proclaimed allegiance to Al-Qaeda supremo Osama bin Laden – and their allies from the more political Hezb al-Islam movement routinely fire mortar shells on the base.



They launched a fierce military offensive in May 2009 aimed at toppling internationally-backed President Sharif Sheikh Ahmed, whose administration has owed its survival largely to the protection of AMISOM’s 5,300 peacekeepers.

The Al-Shaabab accuse AMISOM’s Ugandan and Burundian soldiers of occupying their country and being engaged in a Christian crusade against Muslim Somalia.

Earlier Monday, the AU mission’s top civilian official and the UN special envoy to Somalia visited the base and reiterated their full support to Sharif’s transitional government.

The Ugandan soldier killed on Monday and a Burundian peacekeeper killed several days earlier were evacuated by plane on Tuesday, according to an AFP reporter at the AMISON base.

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