US airstrikes hit Al-Shabaab hideout in Somalia, 26 dead

Washington: The US military has stepped up its air campaign against Al-Shabaab militants in Somalia in recent days, with US Africa Command (AFRICOM) officials Friday stating that another 26 ‘terrorists’ had been killed.

The latest air strike, which occurred Friday in the Hiran region of central Somalia, came as violence in the capital Mogadishu flared.

AFRICOM did not provide any details about the strikes but such attacks are usually conducted by drones.

The strike brings the toll of Shabaab militants killed in recent days to 81, with 20 killed February 25, and another 35 killed a day earlier.

Such strikes ‘maintain pressure on al-Shabaab and disrupt its planning cycle and degrade its ability to mass forces and coordinate attacks against the Somali people’, AFRICOM’s deputy intelligence director Brigadier General Gregory Hadfield said in a statement. However, it must be stated here that Thursday in Mogadishu, a Shabaab car bomb exploded, killing at least 19 people.

Shabaab fighters were pushed out of Somalia’s capital in 2011, and subsequently from other towns and cities, by African Union troops.

The Al-Qaeda-linked group still holds sway in large parts of the countryside even though the US military is supporting local partner forces fight the jihadists.

Shabaab launches regular gun and bomb attacks on government, military and civilian targets in Mogadishu, as well as ambushes on military convoys and outposts. In one strike in January, AFRICOM said it killed 52 Somali militants.

AFP

Exit mobile version