Landmine
blast wounds AU peacekeepers in Somalia.
(Muqdisho,
January 27,
2008 Ceegaag Online)
Landmine blast wounded at
least three African Union peacekeepers in the Somali capital
on Saturday, witnesses and a spokesman for the AU force
said.
Soldiers from Uganda and
Burundi are serving as peacekeepers in Mogadishu, where the
interim government faces an insurgency led by remnants of a
hard-line Islamic courts movement.
Captain Barigye Bahouku,
the AU force spokesman, said one of their vehicles hit a
landmine planted near Mogadishu's sea port.
"A number of our troops
have been injured but I do not have the full details yet,"
he said by telephone.
A witness said at least
three peacekeepers were hurt.
"I saw three wounded
soldiers lying down. They were bleeding badly," local
resident Mohamed Qalinle told Reuters. He said Somali
government troops sealed off the site of the explosion and
arrested several people.
In a separate incident, a
remote-controlled roadside bomb killed one government
soldier and two civilians in the Elgab neighborhood of
southern Mogadishu.
"The bomb was remotely set
off when the government military vehicle was passing," a
police spokesman said.
Fighting in Mogadishu alone
killed 6,500 people last year, according to a local human
rights group tracking the death toll.
Hundreds of thousands of
civilians have been forced to abandon their homes and
livelihoods in what the United Nations calls Africa's worst
humanitarian crisis.
Somalia has been mired in
anarchy since warlord’s toppled military Leader Mohamed Siad
Barre in 1991. The interim government's attempts to restore
central rule have largely been paralyzed by infighting and
the Islamist-led insurgency.
Source: Reuters
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