/ 4 June 2010

Insurgents parade bodies after Mogadishu battle

Somali insurgents displayed the bodies of what they said were African Union troops on Friday following a day of fierce clashes with government troops for control of Mogadishu.

Both the al-Qaeda-inspired al-Shabaab and the embattled Western-backed government claimed victory in fighting that left at least 21 civilians and an unknown number of combatants dead.

The capital was calmer after the government offensive launched on Thursday to recapture strategic neighbourhoods of Mogadishu, which was turned into a battlefield and virtually emptied of its population.

Independent access to the contested areas was made difficult by the military stand-off, but residents reached by phone said al-Shabaab fighters paraded bodies of soldiers, including from an attack on an armoured vehicle belonging to the African Union mission in Somalia (Amisom).

“I saw the dead body of a soldier but I could not identify him. There was also another one which they said was the charred body of from the destroyed troop carrier,” witness Faisal said.

The main spokesperson for al-Shabaab, whose leaders claim allegiance to Osama bin Laden, said the government offensive had been repelled.

“The enemy tried to advance into the areas we control but following the lesson they were taught by our mujahedin [holy warriors], they will never try again,” said Sheikh Ali Mohamoud Rage, the main spokesperson.

“Today, we can all see the casualties we inflicted on them. We destroyed an armoured vehicle, killing all on board. We also seized a bulldozer belonging to Amisom,” Rage told reporters.

AU troops back government forces in the fight against the insurgents.

AU military officials in Mogadishu could not be reached for comment, but several witnesses confirmed the incidents and al-Shabaab posted pictures on a website affiliated to their movement.

“I was trapped inside my house yesterday during the fighting and I saw an armoured vehicle with an AU marking burning outside. There was also a bulldozer trapped in a ditch,” said local resident Mohamed Hassan.

The bulldozer was believed to be used by Amisom troops to fill trenches dug by al-Shabaab to protect their positions.

Denial
A government security official denied its offensive had been thwarted.

“Our forces are holding several neighbourhoods in northern Mogadishu where they fought the rebels. The situation is calm today,” Ali Nur said.

On May 21 and 22, as President Sharif Sheikh Ahmed was in Turkey mustering new support for his embattled transitional federal government (TFG), al-Shabaab and its Hezb al-Islam allies launched a devastating attack on Mogadishu.

They seized large swathes of the northern Shibis and Bondhere neighbourhoods, moving them within barely more than a stone’s throw of the shrivelling perimeter housing the Presidency and other key institutions.

It also gave them a strategic vantage point over Mogadishu port and the ability to disrupt supplies to the government and Amisom.

The AU mission said at the time that the insurgents had crossed “a red line” and that the rebel advance warranted tough reprisals. — Sapa-AFP