
| THE HANDSTAND |
2ndWINTER2011 November-December
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U.S. And French
Air Strikes Raise Human Toll in Somalia
The human toll from yet another imperialist-sponsored war
in Africa grows daily, reports Abayomi Azikiwe.
By Abayomi Azikiwe
November 25, 2011 "All Africa" - - The Somali
conflict is part of ongoing campaigns by the Pentagon and
NATO to secure large sections of Africa that have
strategic value to the US and Europe.
United States and French military involvement in Africa
is taking a deadly toll in Somalia. Despite Washington's
denials, the people of this nation are suffering under
the impact of yet another imperialist-driven war.
Kenyan army units crossed over into southern Somalia in
October in an operation aimed at eliminating the bases of
the Al-Shabaab Islamic resistance movement, which
controls large sections of this Horn of Africa nation.
French military spokesperson Col. Thierry Burkhard
confirmed recently that Paris was flying equipment to
reinforce the Kenyan soldiers. France in recent months
has been involved in overthrowing the government of Ivory
Coast, regime change in Libya and curbing piracy in the
Gulf of Guinea off West Africa.
The Somali conflict is part of ongoing campaigns by the
Pentagon and NATO to secure large sections of Africa that
have strategic value to US and European imperialism. The
White House has justified its aggression by labelling Al-Shabaab
a 'terrorist organization' affiliated with Al-Qaeda. Two
US administrations have armed and financed the so-called
African Union Mission to Somalia (AMISOM), which has 9,000
troops in Mogadishu protecting a Washington-backed regime.
US DRONES MASSACRE SOMALI CIVILIANS
Daily drone attacks in Somalia have reportedly resulted
in hundreds of civilian deaths in recent weeks. Press TV
reported that 79 more people have been killed in US
assassination drone attacks in southern Somalia, bringing
the deaths to 146 over the past two days. The US military
launched terror drone attacks on Bilis Qooqaani town,
which is located 278 miles southwest of the Somali
capital Mogadishu on 11 November.
In addition, on the same day a French military helicopter
crashed near the southern port city of Kismayo, killing
nine people. The military chopper went down while
providing cover for Kenyan military units attacking Al-Shabaab
bases in the vicinity.
These increased air strikes in Somalia are related to
deployment of US personnel and weapons in the Horn of
Africa, North Africa and the Arabian Peninsula. Drones
are being launched in at least five other countries in
these regions.
The Washington Post reported on 27 October that the US
has been secretly flying Reaper drones from a remote
civilian airport in southern Ethiopia, spending millions
of dollars to update an airfield in Arba Minch. The
Reapers began flying missions earlier this year over
neighbouring Somalia. The Pentagon has denied that the
drones are armed, saying they are being used only for
surveillance, but the Post article adds that the
pilotless planes can be equipped with Hellfire missiles
and satellite-guided bombs.
Despite the massacres carried out by Washington in
Somalia, the Al-Shabaab fighters have continued to launch
operations against the Kenyan military forces. On 11
November, the Islamic resistance movement said it had
killed 30 Kenyan troops and six military trucks in an
ambush of a military convoy.
Israel is also getting into the war, and will be
participating with Kenya in intensified offensives inside
neighboring Somalia. (Press TV, 11 November.)
This further militarisation of southern Somalia coincides
with the spread of cholera in the areas of Jilib Town and
Hoomboy, where 81 people have died from the waterborne
disease. Somali physicians reported that within a 24-hour
period starting 12 November, 670 children entered medical
centres in Mareerey northeast of Jilib.
These areas have been severely impacted by flooding as
well. River waters have rushed into districts near Jilib,
destroying hundreds of homes. Doctors report increased
cases of malaria as well due to the Juba and Shabelle
rivers overflowing into many districts.
The AMISOM forces, composed of 9,000 troops from the US-backed
regimes of Uganda and Burundi,are working to prop up
Somilia's Transitional Federal Government and its
military and police. On 12 November, a grenade hit
patrolling pro-TFG soldiers in Mogadishu, killing at
least six.
Also in the northern Mogadishu district of Huriwa, Al-Shabaab
was reported to have killed 20 soldiers from TFG units in
an exchange of mortar fire. In other fighting in the
Dayniile district at least 14 civilians died after the
shelling of a residential area from an unknown source.
The human toll from yet another imperialist-sponsored war
in Africa grows daily.
Abayomi Azikiwe is editor, Pan-African News Wire
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