Cape Argus

Somalia summit vows ‘final push’ against al-Shabaab

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THE leaders of Somalia and neighbouri­ng countries vowed at a summit yesterday to “make the final push” against al-Shabaab as a wide-ranging offensive against the militants gathers pace.

Kenya’s William Ruto, Djibouti’s Ismail Omar Guelleh and Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed attended the summit hosted by Somalia’s President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud in the capital Mogadishu.

They discussed a co-ordinated military offensive against the al-Qaeda linked group, which has been waging an insurgency in the country for 15 years.

“The summit agrees to make the final push for joint operations in the areas that remain under the terrorists to completely liberate the whole of

Somalia from al-Shabaab,” the leaders said in a statement released after the meeting.

In recent months, the Somali army and local clan militias have retaken chunks of territory from the militants in an operation backed by US air strikes and an AU force known as Atmis.

But al-Shabaab still control parts of the countrysid­e from where they have carried out numerous retaliator­y attacks in Somalia and in neighbouri­ng countries.

The leaders pledged to pursue and destroy the jihadists in their stronghold­s across south and central Somalia in a “robust operationa­l campaign” involving the four countries and “through military, finance and ideology”.

“The time-sensitive campaign will prevent any future infiltrati­ng elements into the wider region.”

The meeting comes a day after defence ministers and security chiefs of the four countries met in Mogadishu to prepare for the summit.

Security was beefed up in the city yesterday with movement restrictio­ns, military patrols and all commercial flights suspended.

After taking office in May last year, Mohamud declared an “all-out war” on the jihadists, rallying Somalis to help flush out members of the group he described as “bedbugs”.

But the jihadists, who were forced out of the capital by AU troops in 2011, have frequently retaliated against the latest offensive with bloody strikes.

Although forced out of Mogadishu and other main urban centres, al-Shabaab remains entrenched in the countrysid­e and have continued to demonstrat­e their ability to strike back with lethal force at civilian and military targets.

In the deadliest al-Shabaab attack since the offensive was launched last year, 121 people were killed in two car bomb explosions at the education ministry in Mogadishu in October.

Last week, at least six people were killed in a four-hour al-Shabaab siege at the mayor’s office in central Mogadishu, days after seven soldiers were killed at a military camp in a town retaken by the army.

The group has also been active recently across the border in eastern Kenya, which is a contributo­r to Atmis.

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