Calling for a "more neutral African Union
force", Somalia's information ministry accused the troops of supporting militia
soldiers "in violation of their mandate", as well as attacking
civilians and arresting a top government army commander.
Several rival factions are battling for
control of Kismayo, a strategic and economic hub in the southern Jubaland
region: these include former Islamist chief Ahmed Madobe, who in May appointed
himself "president" of Jubaland, and Bare Hirale, a former Somali
defence minister who also leads a powerful militia.
The Kenyan troops, who invaded Somalia in
2011, ousting Al-Qaeda-linked Shebab fighters from Kismayo before joining the
17,700-strong AU force known as AMISOM, back Madobe's control of the region.
But since Mogadishu's weak central government does not recognise the title of "president" or the region of Jubaland, the Kenyan troops are seen as opposing the central government they are mandated -- and funded by the UN and European Union -- to support.
Abdishakur Ali Mire, Somali deputy information
minister, called for an "immediate replacement" of Kenyan troops
there with AU forces from other nations.
"There was a targeted offensive against
civilians and the SNA (Somali National Army) command centre in Kismayo by the
AMISOM Section Two forces," Mire said in a statement released late Sunday.
"Kenyan forces arrested and mistreated"
the government army commander in Kismayo, he added, calling for his immediate
release.
AMISOM's sector two, the Kismayo region, is
manned by more than 4,000 Kenyan troops, as well as a small force from Sierra
Leone.
Restive Jubaland lies in the far south of
Somalia and borders both Kenya and Ethiopia. Control is split between multiple
forces including clan militia, Kenyan and Ethiopian soldiers and the Shebab.
Rich in farmland, and possessing a lucrative
charcoal industry, the region is also viewed by Kenya as a key buffer zone to
protect its borders.
Kismayo has changed hands more than a dozen
times since the collapse of central government in 1991.
No comments:
Post a Comment