19 March, 2012

2-Jets bomb al Shabaab base in southern Somalia

 2-Jets bomb al Shabaab base in southern Somalia

Reuters

* Al Shabaab militants confirm bombardment

* Regional military official says jets Kenyan, no

confirmation

* Kenyan troops moved into Somalia to hunt down militants

(Adds AU force welcoming air raid, fresh detail)

By Abdi Sheikh and Feisal Omar

MOGADISHU, March 17 (Reuters) - Jets bombed a base run by
Islamist al Shabaab rebels north of Somalia's Kismayu port on
Saturday, local residents and officials said, but it was not
clear who carried out the raid or whether there were casualties.

Kenya sent troops into anarchic Somalia in October after
cross-border raids and kidnappings that it blamed on al Shabaab,
which has allied itself with al Qaeda, but regional security has
not improved. Somali militants killed nine people in an attack
in Kenya's capital Nairobi last week.

A regional Somali military official said the jets were
Kenyan. A Kenyan military spokesman in Nairobi could not confirm
this, and neither could U.N. peacekeepers in Somalia.

Al Shabaab confirmed the bombardment and said none of its
insurgents had been killed or wounded. But a Somali government
official in the area where the attack took place said some
militants had been killed in the bombing.

The jets hit the militants' base near the village of
Daytubako, 135 km (84 miles) north of Kismayu, the nerve centre
of al Shabaab operations in the Horn of Africa country.

Residents in Jilib, a town 15 km from the scene, described
what they saw and heard with respect to the bombing.

"First we saw two jets flying towards Daytubako, and after
(some) minutes we heard the thunder of the bombs. The jets
bombed, flew past, returned to the same spot and dropped several
other bombs," said Kasim Olow, a Jilib inhabitant.

Al Shabaab said its fighters escaped the bombing.

"The jets bombed Daytubako village, but they killed animals
and injured four civilians. No Al Shabaab casualties," said
Sheikh Abdiasis Abu Musab, al Shabaab's military spokesman.

"One jet targeted a well where civilians were watering their
animals. It dropped several bombs on this well."


KENYAN JETS?

A spokesman for the Western-backed government said there
were no civilian casualties and the al Shabaab base was damaged.

"Kenyan jets bombed an al Shabaab base at Daytubako today.
Several bombs successfully hit (the base). I am sure more rebels
are dead but we do not have the exact number of casualties,"
said Mohamud Farah, spokesman for Somali government troops in
the Lower Juba region of southern Somalia.

"Pastoralists were fetching water from a well near the al
Shabaab base. There were no civilian casualties."

The African Union peacekeeping force, known as AMISOM,
welcomed the raid. "AMISOM has not launched operations in the
Kismayu area but we know it is under the (control of) enemies of
the Somali people so any attacks on them (rebels) are welcome,"
AMISOM spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Paddy Ankunda said.

Kenyan forces thrust into Somalia after raids in the border
region that threatened the tourism industry in east Africa's
biggest economy and wider regional destabilisation.

Neighbouring Ethiopia has also dispatched forces into
Somalia to support its shaky government, which holds the capital
Mogadishu with the help of AMISOM.

Somalia has been in shambles since warlords toppled dictator
Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991. Fighting has killed more than 21,000
people since al Shabaab launched its insurgency in 2007, and
possibly over one million in 20 years.

The rebels are fighting to topple the Mogadishu government
and impose a harsh brand of Islamic sharia law on Somalia.

(Writing by James Macharia; Editing by Mark Heinrich)



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