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WorldAl-Shabab attack on Somali military base kills seven soldiers

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Al-Shabab attack on Somali military base kills seven soldiers

In October, government troops and militias from affiliated clans reclaimed the base from al-Shabab.

At least seven soldiers, including the base commander, were killed when fighters from the al-Shabab group stormed a military base in central Somalia that the government had taken back from them last year, according to an officer.

According to Captain Aden Nur, a military officer in a nearby town, attackers from the al-Qaeda affiliate drove a suicide car bomb into the base in the village of Hawadley on Tuesday before opening fire.

“We repelled al-Shabab [but] lost seven soldiers, including our commander,” Nur told Reuters.

Al-Shabab claimed responsibility for the attack in a statement, saying it had killed “many apostate soldiers and their commander”.

The base is located about 60km (35 miles) north of the capital, Mogadishu, and was wrested from al-Shabab’s control in October by government forces and allied clan militias.

The operation was part of a broader government offensive, which began in August and has made significant gains. On Monday, the government announced it had captured Harardhere, an al-Shabab stronghold on the Indian Ocean coast that it had held for a decade.

As pressure on al-Shabab has grown, its fighters have struck back. They have stepped up gun and bomb attacks on the military and civilians, including in areas where they have retreated.

The group has been fighting since 2007 to topple Somalia’s central government and impose its strict interpretation of Islamic law.

In some regions, residents said al-Shabab’s tactics – including torching houses, destroying wells and killing civilians, combined with demands for taxes during the worst drought in 40 years – has pushed locals to form paramilitary groups to fight alongside the government.

But in other towns and villages, al-Shabab’s courts are gaining widespread acceptance as constitutional courts struggle with backlogs and a perception of being corrupt.

The conflict has contributed to a food crisis in Somalia. More than 200,000 Somalis are suffering from catastrophic food shortages, and some parts of central Somalia are on the brink of famine.

Source: Aljazeera.com
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