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[Dehai-WN] (Reuters): Somali militants hit Kismayu as African troops move in

From: Berhane Habtemariam <Berhane.Habtemariam_at_gmx.de_at_dehai.org>
Date: Tue, 2 Oct 2012 18:50:55 +0200

Somali militants hit Kismayu as African troops move in


Tue Oct 2, 2012 4:12pm GMT

* Blast happened as AU tanks, troops moved into Kismayu

* Signals rebels intent to strike back, warn of more

* Moderate rebels seen peeling away, hardcore to remain

* Militants may seek "spectacular" strike abroad

By Abdi Sheikh

MOGADISHU, Oct 2 (Reuters) - African Union troops and tanks occupied al
Shabaab's former stronghold of Kismayu on Tuesday, but the Somali Islamist
militants gave notice of their intention to fight back, saying they
detonated a bomb in the port city.

The blast points to the al Qaeda-linked rebels' ability to hit back with
covert strikes and continues a pattern of attacks in other urban strongholds
from where they have retreated under military pressure, including the
capital.

A spokesman for al Shabaab's military operations, Sheikh Abdiasis Abu Musab,
said the bomb was planted inside a district administration office building
now housing Somali troops and warned of more attacks.

"This is only an introduction to the forthcoming explosions," he told
Reuters. The militants had succeeded in "killing many", Musab said.

The government said the explosion caused no casualties.

Kenyan troops fighting under the AU flag entered Kismayu for the first time
on Tuesday after launching an offensive against the port on Friday, forcing
the rebels to flee.

They followed hundreds of Somali government troops and allied militia
fighters who deployed in the city on Monday.

Al Shabaab's strength is hard to gauge. Mohamud Farah, a spokesman for
Somalia's government forces, said between 4,000-5,000 fighters were hiding
in the southern Juba regions.

Hundreds of foreign fighters had joined the insurgency at its peak from
countries such as Afghanistan, Pakistan, Kenya, Tanzania as well as the
United States and Britain, Somalia's last government said.

"Foreign fighters (also) started leaving when they saw their space was
shrinking," a Nairobi-based security adviser said, referring to the
offensive by African Union and Somali government troops that has steadily
won back rebel-held ground over the past 14 months.

After the surrender of Kismayu, defection rates among footsoldiers were also
expected to pick up, with the rebel group seen as a losing proposition.

What will be left behind, analysts say, is a hardline core.

Whether al Shabaab is able to wage a prolonged campaign of guerrilla attacks
on Kismayu will largely hinge on Mogadishu's success in establishing a
regional administration that satisfies competing clan interests in the
south.

"If you have marginalised clans, al Shabaab will find allies in them. If all
clans are on board it will be hard for al Shabaab to infiltrate Kismayu,"
the security adviser said.

REGIONAL ECONOMIES AT RISK

Al Shabaab, which formally merged with al Qaeda in February, has been seen
as a major threat to stability in east Africa.

The militants warned that although they had withdrawn from Kismayu, the AU
offensive had not yet dealt the combat-hardened rebels a knock-out blow and
that it would hit back against Kenyan and Ethiopian targets.

"We shall never spare Kenya and Ethiopia even if they withdraw their troops.
They are age old enemies of Somalia and we shall fight them be it in their
lands or here till the doomsday," al Shabaab spokesman Sheikh Ali Mohamud
Rage said.

There are likely to be growing fears that the battered militants will look
to carry out high profile attacks beyond Somalia's borders, in a bid to
re-establish their jihadist credentials.

"It appears that, with the loss of Kismayu, Shabaab's days as a
quasi-conventional military force occupying and, to an extent, administering
territory within Somalia are over," said J. Peter Pham of U.S. think-tank
the Atlantic Council.

However, Pham said, al Shabaab is far from a spent force.

"In fact, freed of the burden of actual governance ... the hardline
extremists within Shabaab are now actually freer to evolve into a true
terrorist organisation and possibly pose a greater threat not just to
Somalia, but to neighbouring countries and possibly beyond," Pham said.

The loss of footholds across southern and central Somalia means the hardline
remnants of al Shabaab will not have access to the lucrative rackets that
previously financed the group.

Even so, Will Hartley of IHS Jane's said al Shabaab was capable of an attack
similar to the suicide bombings in Kampala that killed 79 people watching
the World Cup soccer final in 2010.

"Until they actually lost control of that last territory (Kismayu), al
Shabaab's energies were very much on Somalia," Hartley said.

"Having faced quite a significant setback which has severely damaged their
prestige, they may well look to carry out high profile operations that will
look to re-establish their reputation."

C Thomson Reuters 2012 All rights reserved

 




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