Rebels shoot dead Somali soldiers
MOGADISHU — Islamist rebels shot dead three members of Somalia’s security forces in the capital yesterday, police and witnesses said on the first day of Ramadan, the Muslim fasting month when insurgents had warned they would stage attacks.
The government and African Union (AU) peacekeepers have stepped up security to try to prevent assaults during the month by the Islamist al-Shebaab group, which has waged a seven-year campaign to impose its strict interpretation of Islamic law.
Two traffic policemen were gunned down by militants on Maka al Mukaram road, a major thoroughfare through the centre of Mogadishu, said Ali Hirsi, the commander of traffic police. “The attackers escaped.”
In a northern district of Mogadishu, a soldier was shot dead by men with pistols, shopkeeper Ali Abdullahi said, adding it happened on the street outside his store.
Al-Shebaab has a strong presence in the north of the capital, residents say.
The group claimed responsibility for all three killings. “This marks the beginning of our operations. More are to follow,” said the spokesman for al-Shebaab’s military operations, Sheikh Abdiasis Abu Musab.
Another al-Shebaab spokesman Sheikh Ali Mohamud Rage had said on Saturday that the extra deployment of AU and Somali forces would not be able to halt their operations.
Al-Shebaab also staged a series of gun and bomb attacks last year during Ramadan, when Muslims fast from dawn to dusk. In the past year or so, al-Shebaab has killed dozens of people in guerrilla-style assaults in Mogadishu, on United Nations (UN) offices, the presidential compound, parliament and the courts.
The government, which is trying to impose order on a nation that has been ruined by more than two decades of conflict, has said it wants more international training and other help, and has also improved co-ordination between its security agencies.
“The security situation remains unpredictable,” the UN special representative for Somalia, Nick Kay, said in Nairobi on Saturday. He noted the government’s warning about attacks during Ramadan, saying it was “apparently a traditional period of al-Shebaab activity”.
The AU forces mounted a new offensive earlier this year against al-Shebaab strongholds in Somalia, driving the militants out of several towns.
But the group still controls swathes of countryside and has made it difficult for the government to send supplies to newly regained towns. That worries officials who say the failure to help inhabitants could be used as propaganda by al-Shebaab.