The African Union Mission
in Somalia (AMISOM), on Monday, revealed that Kenyan fighter jets have
attacked two bases belonging to Islamist al Shabaab insurgents in
Somalia and killed at least 80 militants.
Kenyan planes carried out
the raids on Anole and Kuday in the southern Lower Jubba region
according to AMISOM whose soldiers launched a new offensive against al Shabaab this year.
It, however, did not say when the raids took place
“The air strikes in Anole left more than 30 al Shabaab fighters dead,
three technical vehicles and one Land Cruiser loaded with ammunition
destroyed’’, AMISOM said. More than 50 rebels were killed in the Kuday
raid, it added.
AMISOM said al Shabaab had lost control of more than
10 major towns in the new push by African troops, including soldiers
from Uganda, Djibouti, Ethiopia, Burundi and Sierra Leone.
The Peace
keeping force insisted that they are putting pressure on the terrorist
group to liberate captured areas:, “AMISOM continues to up the pressure
on al Shabaab with a view to liberating more areas in forthcoming
operations,” the force said.
Officials and diplomats have said towns
cleared of Al Shabaab are in a dire state, with food stocks emptied and
largely abandoned by their inhabitants, creating what one envoy
described as “ghost towns”.
They say al Shabaab still controls tracts of countryside, making it difficult for supplies to be moved to the towns.
The Keyan government had sent troops into neighbouring Somalia in 2011
after several attacks inside its territory that it blamed on al Shabaab,
and later joined the peacekeeping force.
The militants have since
carried out a string of assaults to punish Kenya for its intervention
and Al Shabaab fighters killed at least 67 people in a raid on a Nairobi
shopping mall last year.
Al Shabaab claimed responsibility for last
week’s attack on the Kenyan coastal town of Mpeketoni that killed about
65 people, although Kenyan President, Uhuru Kenyatta, dismissed al
Shabaab’s account and said local politicians were behind it.
Somalia’s government is struggling to impose order since the AU
peacekeepers, backed by Somali troops, drove al Shabaab out of the
capital Mogadishu in 2011.
No comments:
Post a Comment