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Somalia: U.N. probes
use of its vehicles in Somalia bombing
Mogadishu Saturday 19 Sep 2009 Shaaficiyah
The United Nations is investigating the use
of its vehicles by suicide bombers who killed 17 African Union
peacekeepers at their main base in Somalia, a senior official
said on Saturday.
President Sheikh Sharif Ahmed's government
said on Friday Islamist rebels had seized more U.N. vehicles
in readiness for suicide attacks.
"There are very large numbers of U.N.
vehicles in Somalia that have been used for a variety of projects,"
Mark Bowden, the U.N. humanitarian coordinator for Somalia
told Reuters.
Bowden said the U.N. had been given the chassis
number of one of the vehicles used in the attack. "We
are trying to trace whether it's a U.N. vehicle," he
said.
Bowden said the attack on the peacekeepers'
base next to Mogadishu airport on Thursday would not weaken
the U.N.'s resolve to deliver aid to half the Somali population
but it could hamper operations on the ground.
"We have to take greater precautions
around Mogadishu, clearly the airport is more at risk and
that will affect our ability to move staff and humanitarian
goods," he said.
Insurgents overran U.N. compounds in Jowhar
and Baidoa in May and July, seizing aid supplies and vehicles.
This has given rise to speculation that the vehicles used
in the suicide attacks were captured then.
Bowden said the vehicles could have come from
elsewhere. "Depending on the marking, they could have
been vehicles that have been brought in from the Eritrean
peacekeeping operation or they are vehicles that have been
used on projects over the years," he said.
The al Shabaab rebel group, which Washington
says is al Qaeda's proxy in Somalia, controls much of the
south and parts of the capital Mogadishu.
Together with Hizbul Islam, the group has
been fighting government troops and African Union peacekeepers
to impose its own strict version of sharia law throughout
Somalia.
Al Shabaab ordered traders at the country's
biggest market, Bakara, to join their fight or vacate their
stalls, businessmen said. The group also told them to contribute
financially and in kind to their cause.
More than 18,000 Somalis have been killed
since the start of 2007 and driven another 1.5 million from
their homes.
Bowden said severe drought for the fifth year
in a row had compounded the effects of rising violence and
pushed half of the population into food aid dependence.
Source: Reuters
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