Al-Shabaab militants ‘kill 43 Ethiopian troops’ in Somalia

Militants target Amisom base in suicide car bomb attack, no official comment on deaths

File photo: African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM) officers were targeted in a suicide car bomb attack in the central Somalian town of Halgan. Photograph: Mohamed Abdiwahab/AFP/Getty Images
File photo: African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM) officers were targeted in a suicide car bomb attack in the central Somalian town of Halgan. Photograph: Mohamed Abdiwahab/AFP/Getty Images

Somali al-Shabaab militants said their fighters rammed a suicide car bomb into a base of Ethiopian troops serving with the African Union’s Amisom force, stormed inside and killed 43 soldiers on Thursday.

Residents near the base in the central town of Halgan said they heard a huge explosion and then heavy exchanges of gunfire shortly before dawn. Shots rang out at least an hour after the initial blast, they added.

There was no immediate comment from Amisom, which is made up of troops from African nations supporting Somalia’s Western-backed government in its fight against the al-Qaeda-linked militants.

Amisom usually says it is up to troop-contributing countries to announce casualties. In the past, casualty figures cited by al-Shabaab have been much higher than official numbers.

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“Our fighters stormed the Halgan base of Amisom,” al-Shabaab’s military operations spokesman Abdiasis Abu Musab told Reuters. He said the group used a suicide car bomb and then militants had exchanged fire with Ethiopian troops there.

He said “several” al-Shabaab fighters died, but did not give a number.

“It was a huge blast. It destroyed the gate and parts of the base,” the spokesman said, adding al-Shabaab fighters overran the base and drove out the Ethiopian troops before withdrawing.

Fighters also repelled a counter attack by Djibouti troops deployed from another base in the area, he said.

The group often launches gun and bomb attacks on officials, Somali security forces and Amisom in a bid to topple the government and impose its own strict interpretation of Islam on Somalia.

In January, Kenyan troops serving with Amisom suffered heavy losses when al-Shabaab made a dawn raid on their camp in El Adde, near the Kenyan border. The group said it killed more than 100 soldiers but Kenya gave no exact casualty figure.

Reuters