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Somalia: Uganda wants
Somalia mandate to be reviewed
Mogadishu Thursday 1 October 2009 Shaaficiyah Media
Defence minister Crispus Kiyonga has said
the mandate of the peacekeeping force in Somalia needs to
be reviewed.
Briefing Parliament yesterday, the minister said the African
Union (AU) force, composed mostly of Ugandan soldiers, should
be allowed to attack.
As per now, the mandate is very restrictive. It is framed
in a way that they cannot attack. They might even know that
the insurgents are planning an attack but they cannot attack
them, he said.
The idea was welcomed by the majority of MPs. The legislators
demanded that the review be expedited.
Kiyonga also briefed Parliament about a meeting he chaired
last week with defence ministers of Burundi and Somalia and
representatives of the AU and the UN.
The meeting, he said, agreed to fast-track the training of
Somali security forces. He explained that Djibouti, Rwanda,
Tanzania, and two West African countries were willing to participate
in the training.
Kiyonga, however, raised concerns about the slow pace of disbursing
funds for the Somalia operation. By last week, only $37m out
of the $213m pledged had been sent.
On the mysterious deaths among the peacekeepers that occurred
in July, the minister explained that four Burundians and three
Ugandans died due to lack of Vitamin B1.
He said the situation had been contained by improving the
diet, including adding fruits.
A total of 45 Ugandan soldiers have died since the AU operation
started in March 2007. Of those, 22 died at the hands of the
insurgents, 22 of natural diseases and one committed suicide.
On September 17, four Ugandans were killed when suicide bombers
drove two UN cars into the peacekeepers compound at
Mogadishu airport.
These attacks would not deter the AU force, Kiyonga noted,
adding that in the long run, the stand-by African force should
be able to handle volatile situations like Somalia.
SOURCE: THE NEW VISION
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