MOGADISHU, April 9: Islamist fighters in Somalia seized a strategic town north of Mogadishu on Wednesday for the second time in two weeks, a spokesman for the insurgents said.
Jowhar is the most significant of several towns the rebels have captured in recent months, highlighting the inability of the Western-backed interim government to impose its authority despite support from Ethiopian and African Union (AU) troops.
The Islamists, who are remnants of a sharia courts group ousted from the capital at the end of 2006, briefly seized Jowhar on March 26. Then early on Wednesday, they did it again.
“No fighting took place because the enemy troops had abandoned the town by midnight when they heard we were coming,” the Islamists’ spokesman Abdirahim Isa Adow said by telephone.
The rebels freed prisoners in Jowhar, which served as the government’s temporary base in 2005, Adow said.
Local Somali broadcaster Shabelle said the Islamist fighters wore turbans and chanted “Allahu akbar” (God is greatest).
In recent months the insurgents have seized towns from local administrations that often amount to little more than militias, only to give them up and melt away.
As the rebels step up their attacks, a spokesman for Burundian troops serving with the AU peacekeeping force in Mogadishu said one of their soldiers was killed on Tuesday by a suicide bomber who rammed a car into the gates of an AU base.—Reuters
Dear visitor, the comments section is undergoing an overhaul and will return soon.