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Uganda, Somalia trade blame over deadly Mogadishu shoot-out

Uganda, Somalia trade blame over deadly Mogadishu shoot-out
Uganda’s army said Somali troops opened fire on the convoy of Brig. Paul Lokech, who heads the Ugandan contingent of the African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM), during a lockdown on the capital after two bomb blasts on Friday killed dozens of people. (File Photo)
Updated 26 February 2018

Uganda, Somalia trade blame over deadly Mogadishu shoot-out

Uganda, Somalia trade blame over deadly Mogadishu shoot-out

KAMPALA: The Ugandan army said Monday its troops had shot dead three Somali soldiers in Mogadishu, accusing them of opening fire on a military convoy carrying Uganda’s peacekeeping commander.
Uganda’s army said Somali troops opened fire on the convoy of Brig. Paul Lokech, who heads the Ugandan contingent of the African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM), during a lockdown on the capital after two bomb blasts on Friday killed dozens of people.
Ugandan military spokesman Brig. Richard Karemire said his country’s soldiers had retaliated in self-defense.
“There is absolutely no reason why the AMISOM forces in their designated sector of responsibility should have been blocked and fired at en route back to the base after providing critical support and with some victims of the attack being quickly evacuated for urgent medical attention,” he said.
“As the incident is being investigated, let it be clear that AMISOM rules of engagement provide for self-defense and anyone who fires at these forces becomes a target,” he added.
However Somali security official, Mohamed Ali, blamed the AMISOM convoy for the bloodshed.
“There were about nine AMISOM military trucks involved in the incident, they were stopped by the officers at the checkpoint who were following instructions to stop all trucks due to lockdown but the AMISOM convoy commander ordered his juniors to forcefully pass by the checkpoint and opened fire on the soldiers,” he told AFP.
AMISOM on Saturday had said some of its troops “transporting injured civilians... were involved in an incident” at a National Intelligence and Security Agency (NISA) checkpoint near Kilometer-4, the city’s main junction.
“The incident is under investigation by both the federal government of Somalia and AMISOM,” it said in a statement.
Friday’s first bombing was at an entrance to the hilltop presidential palace complex while a second explosion hit a hotel close to the NISA headquarters, the presumed target.
The bombings were claimed by the Al-Qaeda linked Shabab militants who are fighting to overthrow the internationally-backed government in Mogadishu, which is defended by 22,000 AMISOM troops, including 6,000 Ugandans.