
Monday, October 10, 2011
The forces took a former pasta factory building, two key junctions and two districts in the northeast of the city, giving them control of movement into Mogadishu from the northern front.
"Operations have started to take control of the northern corridor and drive the Al-Qaeda-linked extremists out of the city," the government said in a statement.
"The pasta factory compound was an operational hub for the extremists from which they shell civilian targets. This operation is intended to save the lives of the people who have returned to their homes," the statement added.
The AU and Somali government forces began the offensive on Saturday to expel remnants left in Mogadishu after Shebab fighters abandoned most of their positions there in August.
However, a Shebab official who did not want to be named said they allowed the African Union Mission for Somalia (AMISOM) troops to take the pasta factory to trap them.
"Allowing the AMISOM troops to come to the pasta factory was just a trap planned earlier so that they spread out their troops," the official told AFP.
"The idea of the Shebab was not to defend any positions, but to do as much damage to AMISOM."
Monday's drive comes nearly a week after the insurgents carried out their worst ever suicide attack in Mogadishu, killing at least 82 people and demonstrating that they were still able to wreak havoc deep inside the city.
It was also the Shebab's first attack since their surprise withdrawal and their spokesman Ali Mohamud Rage vowed more attacks against the government and the AU troops.
AU force commander Major General Fred Mugisha last week called for stronger world action against the Shebab.
Although the 9,000-strong AU force controls 95 percent of Mogadishu, according to Mugisha, it remains overstretched and unable to ensure effective security of the war-ravaged city.
The rebels still control Dayniile district in southern Mogadishu and the main road linking the city to the western regions after their northern bases were captured in Monday's operation.
Residents reported intense fighting during the offensive.
"There is heavy fighting around Jungal. They are exchanging heavy artillery fire," said Fartun Idris, a witness.
Mugisha urged the population Monday to back the transitional government.
"We urge the civilian population to support their government and isolate and reject criminals. That way we can start to provide effective security together," he said in a statement.
The Shebab had waged a four-year battle in Mogadishu to topple the Western-backed Somali government before suddenly abandoning their bases.
Analysts said internal dissent, dwindling resources and population support as well as their failure to dislodge the government forced them to give up the bloody campaign.
However, the Shebab said it was a change of military tactic, which the security forces in Somalia said meant resorting to guerilla attacks.
The weak Somali government has repeatedly urged the international community to capitalise on the insurgents' retreat to consolidate the administration's authority.
Somalia has lacked an effective central government since plunging into a bloody civil war two decades ago.
Last month, the transitional government, authorities of two semi-autonomous regional administrations and a pro-government militia launched a new bid to restore security and set up a national authority after the Shebab pull-out.