Muslim militant group al-Shabaab overran two Somali army bases yesterday and killed at least seven soldiers, both the group and the military said, a day after the group retook a southern town.
The raids on the bases in the town of Yaqbariweyne in the Lower Shabelle region and the retaking of Janale town after African Union (AU) forces quit are the latest gains in an offensive by the group that has helped them seize several towns this month.
The Somalian government has dismissed al-Shabaab’s gains, saying the areas retaken have no strategic value. However, the offensive has shown the group can keep up pressure on the Western-backed government.
“We took the two Yaqbariweyne military bases in a fierce fighting this morning,” al-Shabaab military operations spokesman Sheikh Abdiasis Abu Musab told reporters.
Thirteen soldiers were killed, he said.
Osman Abdullahi, a military officer, told reporters that seven soldiers were killed and five others wounded.
“The soldiers defended themselves and now they are fighting al-Shabaab in the outskirts of the town,” he said.
Rebels and officials often cite different casualty figures.
Farah Ali, a resident of Yaqbariweyne, which lies northwest of the capital, Mogadishu, said he had counted six dead soldiers and said the town was now calm.
On Thursday, al-Shabaab said it had retaken Janale, about 90km south of Mogadishu. Ali Nur, the acting governor of Lower Shabelle, confirmed the town’s capture.
“This is a great shame and it will be difficult for the residents to trust the Somali[an] government and the AU troops,” Nur told reporters.
He said the group now controlled much of Lower Shabelle, a region that extends to the south of Mogadishu.
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