Africa

Four Ugandan peacekeepers killed in battle


Posted  Monday, August 30  2010 at  19:52

In Summary

  • Leader says government not receiving as much international support as in Iraq or Afghanistan

MOGADISHU, Monday

Four Ugandan soldiers with the African Union forces in Somalia were killed today when hardline insurgents fired a mortar shell at one of their bases, the force’s spokesman said.

The AU troops, protecting Somalia’s embattled government which the Islamist Shebab rebels are fighting to overthrow, have been locked in heavy clashes since last week with the radical group who have intensified their attacks.

“A mortar was fired at one of our positions and it killed four soldiers and injured eight,” the force’s spokesman Ba-Hoku Barigye told AFP.

The AU troops, numbering some 6,000 Ugandan and Burundian soldiers, are the only hurdle between the Al Qaeda-inspired Shebab and a total take-over of the conflict-torn Somali capital.

The latest battles that have seen the Shebab advance to Mogadishu districts under the control of the AU-protected government prompted President Sharif Sheikh Ahmed to appeal Monday for international assistance.

“It is quite impractical to expect Somalia alone to contain the evil Al Qaeda-Al Shabab alliance as Somalia is emerging from 20 years of destruction and chaotic political environment,” Sharif said in a statement.

He said his government was not receiving as much international support as is being accorded to Pakistan, Afghanistan and Iraq despite facing near-similar insurgencies.

“The Somali government has neither similar support nor nearly as much resources as those countries have. Yet it’s facing a similar, if not more potent, enemy.”

“Since terrorism has become a borderless threat, the Somali government is renewing its plea for urgent international support,” Sharif added.

At the weekend, six civilians were killed when the Shebab fighters attacked a government barracks around Sigale in the capital’s Hodan neighbourhood.

The attack drew a retaliatory operation from government forces, sparking an intense battle. (AFP)