Bangkok Post

Hundreds of unpaid soldiers in protest

-

MOGADISHU: Hundreds of soldiers went on strike in the Somali capital on Sunday, blocking roads and forcing businesses to close in protest over unpaid salaries, a challenge for the new president who has vowed to defeat Islamist militant group, al-Shebab.

Witnesses saw soldiers — some armed — stopping traffic at several locations including on two major roads and at two junctions.

At the K5 junction, unarmed soldiers ordered shops and restaurant­s to close and on Maka Al Mukaram, a major street, soldiers blocked traffic with a pickup truck mounted with an anti-aircraft gun.

Capt Ali Osman, a military official, said the soldiers were protesting to remind the president of his campaign promise to pay all arrears.

“He was elected in February and now we are in the middle of March so we conducted a peaceful demo to remind the president of his promise because he has not paid us,” Capt Osman said.

Mohamed, a colonel who declined to give his second name, said about 2,000 soldiers from two military bases, Villa Baidoa and the Ex-petrol Refinery, had come out on strike.

“Soldiers from the two bases ... and many other bases in and outside Mogadishu were not paid salary for 15 months,” he said.

Military officials say Somalia’s army is 40,000 strong in Mogadishu and its surroundin­g regions. Semi-autonomous regions outside the capital’s immediate vicinity pay their own armies.

Non-payment of wages is commonplac­e, leading to low morale and threatenin­g the fight against Islamist insurgents.

“Soldiers found out that the 15 months pay was missing due to corruption,” Nur, a major who declined to give his second name, said without elaboratin­g. But, he said, the soldiers had been told they would be paid two months in arrears and, according to witnesses, the demonstrat­ion ended within hours. Somali soldiers are paid about US$100 (about 3,500 baht) a month but the United States and Britain, both major funders of efforts to rebuild the army, supplement that with an extra monthly payment of $100.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand