Somali readies for Ethiopia pullout
http://www.iol.co.za/
African Union forces battling Islamist
insurgents in Somalia are preparing troops to take over should Ethiopia
withdraw more soldiers from the region, their commander said Thursday.
“We have in place contingent measures to ensure
that areas in Bay and Bakool...remain stable and secure in the event of
further Ethiopian troop withdrawals,” said Andrew Gutti, commander of
African Union Mission for Somalia (AMISOM), referring to southwest
Somali regions currently controlled by Ethiopia.
Ethiopian troops, the strongest military power
in Somalia's southwest ever since their November 2011 invasion, pulled
out of the town of Hudur on Sunday, the capital of Bakool region.
Hours later, Somalia's Al-Qaeda-linked Shebab swept into the town, their most important territorial victory for over a year.
The capture prompted jubilant celebrations, which included the beheading of an influential cleric in the town.
Despite a string of losses in recent months,
the Shebab remain a potent threat, still controlling rural areas as well
as carrying out guerrilla attacks in areas apparently under government
control.
Somali militia forces allied to the Ethiopians,
as well as a column of some 2,000 terrified civilians, fled shortly
after the Ethiopian pullout.
Security sources say the withdrawal from Hudur
could signal a wider pullout of Ethiopian forces including from the key
city of Baidoa, warning that if this happens, the 17 000-strong AMISOM
would be hugely overstretched.
AMISOM, which fights alongside Somali
government forces, “is closely monitoring developments following the
withdrawal of Ethiopian troops from Hudur,” the force said in a
statement.
“We are conducting a review of our troop
deployments...and remain confident that there will be sufficient
coverage,” Gutti added.
Security sources say that AMISOM would struggle
at its current capacity to take over Ethiopian positions, while Somali
troops who have worked closely with Ethiopian troops might not
necessarily cooperate so well with other forces.
So far, Hudur is the only major town Ethiopians
have pulled out of, but troops are also packing kit in Baidoa in
apparent preparation to leave.
Ethiopian troops entered Somalia in late 2011
to attack Shebab bases, shortly after Kenyan troops invaded Somalia from
the far south.
While Kenyan troops have since joined AMISOM, Ethiopia remained separate.
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