http://www.news24.com/Africa/News/special-forces-stage-helicopter-raid-on-somalias-shabaab-20160309
Special forces stage helicopter raid on Somalia's Shabaab
2016-03-09 12:49
Mogadishu - Special forces operatives in two helicopters staged an overnight raid on Somalia's Shabaab insurgents, government officials and the al-Qaeda-linked gunmen said on Wednesday.
The raid, reportedly by foreign troops, targeted the Shabaab-controlled town of Awdhegele, some 50km west of Somalia's capital Mogadishu.
"There was an operation by Special Forces late last night around Awdhegele town. We have reports Shabaab militants suffered casualties," local district commissioner Mohamed Aweys told reporters.
There were no details on who carried out the attack, which came after US air strikes on a Shebab training camp on Saturday which killed more than 150 fighters.
While the US military regularly conducts operations targeting al-Qaeda-linked fighters in Somalia, on Saturday's raid had a higher toll than all previous US strikes combined.
Warplanes and unmanned drones were used in Saturday's strike, which struck an area 195km north of Mogadishu.
The Shabaab group confirmed the overnight raid, saying they had fought off the troops.
Ground fighting
"Armed forces on two military helicopters raided Awdhegele town last night, but they have lost and returned without achieving their objective," Shabaab spokesperson Sheik Abduasiz Abu Musab said in a speech broadcast on the group's Radio Andalus.
"The helicopters landed outside town and the ground forces entered, there was heavy fighting and they were forced to flee."
The Shabaab said they did not know what country the troops were from, but said they were not Somali and spoke a foreign language. It was not clear what they were targeting.
Witnesses reported hearing loud blasts during the night, saying the Shabaab had boosted security during the morning.
"There were several load explosions near the Shabaab base in Awdhegele late last night," local resident Abdikarim Nure said.
"The fighters were patrolling the area this morning, and people are not allowed to go close to the area."
Foreign special forces have periodically launched raids to rescue their captured nationals, including one in 2012 by US elite commandos who swooped in by helicopter to free two aid workers held for three months.
French special forces also staged a raid in January 2013 in an unsuccessful bid to free intelligence agent Denis Allex.
The Shabaab was chased out of Mogadishu in 2011 but remains a dangerous threat in both Somalia and neighbouring Kenya where it carries out regular attacks.
In a separate incident, a car bomb detonated outside a tea shop in Mogadishu on Wednesday morning, killing at least three police officers.
The three were drinking tea when the blast occurred and the driver of the car was "seriously wounded," Mogadishu police commissioner Ali Hersi Barre said. The driver was taken into custody.
And Monday, six people were wounded when a laptop bomb exploded at an airport in Beledweyne, a town 325km north of Mogadishu, where last month Shabaab insurgents claimed a bomb attack which ripped a hole in a passenger plane shortly after takeoff.
-----------
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2016/03/09/world/africa/ap-af-somalia-violence.html?_r=0
Foreign Commandoes Said to Carry Out Night Raid in Somalia
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS MARCH 9, 2016
MOGADISHU, Somalia — In a raid that bore the hallmarks of a foreign special forces unit, soldiers dropped off by helicopters hiked through the nighttime dark to a town controlled by Islamic militants. Then a firefight erupted.
Al-Shabab said Wednesday that its fighters had foiled the attack by foreign forces on Awdhegle town in southern Somalia overnight, and that they retreated with casualties.
The raid came three days after the U.S. carried out an air strike on an al-Shabab training camp that the Pentagon said killed about 150 militants. There was no immediate word on whether U.S. commandoes carried out the Tuesday night ground attack.
Sheikh Abdiaziz Abu Musab, a spokesman for al-Shabab, told a militant-run online radio that the unidentified foreign forces used two helicopters and that one militant was killed.
Mohamed Hassan, an elder in Awdhegle, told The Associated Press that the foreign forces parked their helicopters outside the town and walked at least 3 kilometers (1.9 miles), sneaking into the town to avoid detection by the Islamic fighters and launch a surprise raid.
He said there was gunfire between militants and al-Shabab foot soldiers that started near the police station.
The exact target of the raid, if any, remains unclear.
Meanwhile, three police officers and one civilian were killed Wednesday in a suicide car bombing outside a cafe near the police academy in the Somali capital, Mogadishu, said police Gen. Ali Hersi Barre.
There was no claim of responsibility for the blast, but it appeared to be part of attacks waged by al-Shabab, which was ousted from Mogadishu by African Union peacekeepers in 2011.
Received on Wed Mar 09 2016 - 08:33:56 EST