Breaking news
Over 4,600 Kenyan army soldiers joined the African mission in Somalia 1303123.
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Defense News - Kenya |
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Tuesday, March 13, 2012, 11:29 AM | |||
Over 4,600 Kenyan army soldiers joined the African mission in Somalia. | |||
Kenya
is set to deploy 4,660 soldiers in neighboring Somalia as part of the
Africa Union enforcement force in the Horn of Africa nation, a senior
military official said on Monday, March 12, 2012. |
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Kenya`s Chief of the Defence Forces Gen Julius Karangi at the right. (Credit Photo by Collins Wanzala) |
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Chief of Defense
Forces of the Kenya Defense Forces (KDF) General Julius Karangi said
the east African nation which launched cross border incursion into Somalia
mid October 2011 will have a military council which will be based in
the restive Mogadishu with 16 of its staff being Kenyans and other nations
will contribute 69 staff. |
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Kenyan soldiers prepare to advance near Liboi in Somalia, near Kenya's border town with Somalia, to quell the activity of Shebab insurgents. |
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The
Kenyan soldiers battling Somali militants are due to formally join the
African Union peacekeeping force (AMISOM) this week. Kenyan forces that crossed into Somalia mid October last year have intensified military crackdown inside southern Somalia to push back Al-Shabaab, blamed by Kenya for a series of cross-border kidnappings. The militant group has also come under pressure from AU peacekeepers, who recently pushed out them out of the outskirts of Somali capital Mogadishu, and from Ethiopia, which seized Baidoa town recently. AMISOM which crossed into the Horn of the African nation in 2007 and which has a long comprised of Ugandan and Burundi troops recently registered a string of successes against Al-Shabaab militia who had seized much of the central and southern Somalia. The military chief said the East African nation will compensate families of all soldiers slain in action, according to international laws of war but added there is no clear policies on compensation since it was the first time the Kenyan soldiers have been involved in cross border operation. Karangi said each Kenyan soldier who will joined AMISOM will be paid a monthly allowance of the equivalent of 1,028 U.S.dollars besides medical cover, accommodation, food and evacuation and treatment by the UN in case of injury in Somalia. He said Sierra Leone too has promised to send its soldiers to beef up the peace-enforcement force in June and will be deployed in areas secured and controlled by KDF. "Our soldiers will remain deployed in Somalia on land, air and sea," Karangi said, adding that the UN Security Council Resolution allows deployment of nine general utility helicopters and three attack helicopters for AMISOM operations which KDF may provide if approached. The re-hatting of the Kenya Defense Forces (KDF) into AMISOM is part of the pan African body's strategy to combat Al-Shabaab and whose cost will be provided by the UN. Kenyan officials say Al-Shabaab has continued to incur losses as KDF to continue its emphasis on pacification of areas under KDF and Transitional Federal Government (TFG) control. The 15-member body unanimously last month requested that AMISOM increase the number of its troops and police officers from 12,000 to a maximum of 17,731, and also decided to both expand the UN's logistical support package to the force and extend it through Oct. 31. The AU officials have been in Kenya to verify the amount of equipment which will be used by Kenyan troops once they fall under the authority of AMISOM. The AU team will provide the requirements in order for Kenyan troops to be given the enablers for troops to maintain peace in Somalia. Kenya has been arguing that under AMISOM, it will secure regional backing and ensure the war is well managed under the African Union. Currently, AMISOM's mandate restricts it to operate only in Mogadishu as a peace-keeping force where it is providing security to the Transitional Federal Government (TFG) led by President Sheikh Ahmed Sharif. |
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