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Somalia Famine Aid Defended From Al Qaeda By African Union Offensive

JASON STRAZIUSO   07/28/11 04:05 PM ET   AP

MOGADISHU, Somalia — African Union troops fought house-to-house battles with militants Thursday to clear space for aid groups bringing in food supplies after intelligence reports showed insurgents reinforcing for a possible attack on squalid camps of famine refugees.

Heavy fighting erupted on the line of control between the government side and territory held by al-Shabab, Somalia's dominant militant group.

At least six people were killed. The AU troops also paid a heavy price, with one official saying 19 were wounded, and some of them were put on an ambulance jet bound for Kenya.

Somalia's famine is unfolding in the middle of a war zone, greatly complicating international efforts to prevent a wave of death. Some 2.2 million people live in an inaccessible famine zone controlled by the al-Qaida-linked al-Shabab.

Thursday's house-to-house fighting was only 2 1/2 miles (4 kilometers) from the nearest famine refugee camp, said Lt. Col. Paddy Ankunda, spokesman for the African Union peacekeeping force.

The offensive, he said, was to ensure the city streets are safe for aid groups to get humanitarian supplies to the more than 20,000 famine refugees that have arrived in Mogadishu this month alone.

"The agencies have been trying to deliver. Unfortunately, al-Shabab has been bent on ensuring this aid does not reach the people," Ankunda said. "This operation is about the delivery of humanitarian aid."

Al-Shabab's decision last week to rescind permission allowing aid groups to operate in areas under militant control has denied hundreds of thousands of Somalis access to food aid, he said.

Ankunda added that al-Shabab has sent 300 reinforcement fighters to Mogadishu in recent days.

Refugees have said militants already killed men who tried to flee famine-hit regions of Somalia with their families, saying it is better to starve than accept help from the West. African Union intelligence reports have indicated there could be attacks on Mogadishu's patchwork of ad-hoc refugee camps.

Thursday's battle was a "short, tactical offensive operation," Ankunda said.

"This action will further increase security ... and ensure that aid agencies can continue to operate to get vital supplies to internally displaced," he said.

Mogadishu resident Mohamed Hussein said al-Shabab fighters had withdrawn shortly after the offensive began.

"We have captured most of the bases we attacked ... and our troops are still chasing them," said Abdullahi Ali Anod, a Somali military commander.

Troops from the African Union Mission in Somalia, known as AMISOM, have been eroding al-Shabab's territory all year. Ankunda said the government now controls more than 60 percent of Mogadishu, up from around 40 percent at the beginning of the year.

AMISOM will keep humanitarian organizations informed of future operations to limit the impact on famine relief efforts, he said.

"AMISOM fully understands the need to restrain military operations while the aid agencies mount their humanitarian campaign. However, we are here to maintain stability in Mogadishu, and if we perceive a threat from the extremist insurgents, then it is our duty to protect and defend the most vulnerable from this threat," he said.

The World Food Program operations were being conducted normally, said spokeswoman Challiss McDonough.

"The airlift plans have not been affected at this point," she said. "Our humanitarian mission remains unaffected and unchanged."

Ali Muse, the head of Mogadishu's ambulance service, said his workers had collected the bodies of six dead and 20 wounded after Thursday's fighting.

A medical official at Mogadishu airport said wounded AU peacekeepers would be flown to Nairobi, the capital of neighboring Kenya, for treatment. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he is not authorized to talk with the press. An Associated Press reporter watched as three wounded soldiers were put in a small jet for the flight.

Ankunda said he could confirm only that two AU troops had been wounded.

The famine in the Horn of Africa threatens al-Shabab's hold on areas under its control, with the militants fearing that the disaster will drive away the people they tax and force into military service. The militants previously have blocked aid workers from helping those in need in Somalia, fearing that foreign assistance would undermine their control.

The WFP said Thursday it has a funding shortfall of $252 million for famine relief efforts in the Horn of Africa. The agency said it was encouraged by the response of some donor countries that have pledged $250 million to help.

The WFP estimates more than 11.3 million people need aid across drought-hit regions in East Africa. Most of those affected live in pastoral communities where herds have been wiped out because of a lack of water.

The drought has created a triangle of hunger where the borders of Ethiopia, Kenya and Somalia meet. The U.N. believes tens of thousands already have died in Somalia in areas held by the Islamist rebels.

But the famine has particularly ravaged Somalia because many aid groups were banned from militant-controlled areas two years ago.

Somalia has been mired in conflict since 1991 when longtime dictator Siad Barre was overthrown by warlords who then turned on each other. Islamist militants led by al-Shabab are trying to overthrow the weak U.N.-backed government that is being propped up by about 9,000 AU peacekeepers from Uganda and Burundi.

___

Associated Press writer Abdi Guled contributed to this report from Mogadishu.

___

How to help: http://www.interaction.org/crisis-list/interaction-members-respond-drought-crisis-horn-africa

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MOGADISHU, Somalia — African Union troops fought house-to-house battles with militants Thursday to clear space for aid groups bringing in food supplies after intelligence reports showed insurgen...
MOGADISHU, Somalia — African Union troops fought house-to-house battles with militants Thursday to clear space for aid groups bringing in food supplies after intelligence reports showed insurgen...
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08:30 PM on 07/28/2011
(praise to god) the brave Ugandan and Burundi soldiers who are trying to make peace in Somalia. Ethiopia had troops also in Somalia but this was used as a recruitment tool by Somali jihadist because of ancient rivalry.
I wish some of the more powerful countries in that part of Africa would send troops. And why aren't the Gulf Arabs sending troops. Somalia is a member of Arab League. Seems the African Union is doing the difficult job in Somalia.................. (what god wills)
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Highly Opinionated
The sounds of freedom are fading~Chippewa
07:55 PM on 07/28/2011
I only see is women and children begging for food. The men are out shooting, looting, dragging dead bodies, kidnapping, raping and pirating. A lot of incoming money in pirating and those guns are expensive. You could feed and inoculate a child for years in Somalia on the value of one of those guns and the bullets they shoot just to make a noise statement.
06:24 PM on 07/28/2011
First of all, do these people realize that this famine wouldn't be as big of a problem if they didn't breed like rabbits on steroids?

Second, why should Americans help they tried to kill our soldiers back in the 1990s?
06:17 PM on 07/28/2011
9 people die in 24 hrs (Al-Jazeera) do the math. If you don't feel compassion at all then you're not a human being. Regardless of culture, race, skin color, politics and above all religion these people are looking at us who have so much for very little. Put your blinders aside, set your connotations away, drop the anecdotes and lend a penny or two. In Somalia what we throw away will feed a family for a night or two, and remember above all in these times its always the helpless that suffer the most. In this case this is the elderly, the children and the mothers whom are a segment of the population in this area of the world that do not have even the most basic rights.
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Fonsini
Let there be pie.
06:15 PM on 07/28/2011
So they are "Fighting for Survival" huh.

Well join the club.
05:49 PM on 07/28/2011
Most people who suffer from bad governance will continue submitting until they have less to lose in a rebellion than by continuing to submit.

And where is al-Shabab getting supplies?

They appear to be getting recruits from America, strangely enough.

Seems like this is just another Viet Nam, Afgahnistan sort of thing, where we throw just enough into the fight to keep one side going without ever really besting the other, and just prolong the agony until the inevitable conclusion.

After 20 years, we need to either rethink our whole strategy or call hopeless, "hopeless", let nature take its course and be done with it.

At this point, our aid may be only easing our own consciouses more than doing any long term good.
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bob40wil
05:18 PM on 07/28/2011
I wonder how many of these fanatics will go to bed hungery tonight.
puffadder
The truth is ONE!
05:04 PM on 07/28/2011
This is truly a disaster that confronts the world today, yesteerday, and tomorrow! These people know what suffering is, as they stand helplessly by while watching their children die.
04:47 PM on 07/28/2011
Anyone seen a flotilla around?
04:23 PM on 07/28/2011
After Blackhawk down It is a relief to find that it is the African Union that is responding to this incident.
04:22 PM on 07/28/2011
With all our issues, challenges and differences... news like this makes me grateful to have been lucky enough to be born in a country where I can write, say or scream pretty much anything I want AND has plenty of food and water, through no real effort of my own.
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sophie M
ANTI WAR./animal rescue
04:10 PM on 07/28/2011
did i just read that North Somalia became the newest country?
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sophie M
ANTI WAR./animal rescue
04:05 PM on 07/28/2011
so much sadness prevails., in our world.
do these people not believe in birth control .
should not that be the first .effort.
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invmartyc
Don't bother me. I'm living happily ever after
04:00 PM on 07/28/2011
Please President Obama, DO NOT send our troops to Somalia! We did that under Clinton and looked where it got us! NO WHERE!

Yes it is heartbreaking that the people are starving, they were starving during the Clinton years too. But you have various groups, tribes, and divisions who prey on their people. There is no Somali pride, just a dog eat dog society. You can send in all the food you want and the bad guys will just steal it and sell it off just like they did during the Clinton fiasco. Unless you are prepared to go in there and wipe out all the bad guys this is going to be another "Black Hawk Down". But how can you tell the good guys from the bad guys? They don't wear any uniforms, and unless they are shooting at you with an AK how can you tell?

And remember, these are the same people who thought that the movie "Black Hawk Down" had a happy ending because Americans were slaughtered. There is nothing we can do to help, nothing.
03:43 PM on 07/28/2011
i can truly say i was glad when the somalie pirates were taken out with head shots by our special forces , no one seemed to be upset about that , i think the boys should be sent over for more target practice
Chauncey1186
Yeah, I'm a soshulist - so what?
03:56 PM on 07/28/2011
So, we need yet another war? Really?
04:37 PM on 07/28/2011
Like it or not, as long as there is evil in this world, someone will wage war. Depends on the perspective you have of who is evil too ( take for example all these radical Muslims claiming the "West" is evil, an back and forth)