Jump to navigation

Somalia

Row over troop numbers jeopardises AU mission 

The peacekeeping operation faces uncertainty after Burundi refuses to participate because of personnel allocation cuts

The fate of the new African Union Support and Stabilisation Mission in Somalia (AUSSOM) is in doubt after Burundi announced that it would refuse to participate because its proposed troop allocation was cut from 3,000 to just over 1,000.

The new AUSSOM deployment is initially expected to total 12,626 troops and police personnel, down from 20,000 under its predecessor the African Transition Mission in Somalia (AC Vol 65 No 11, Mogadishu gives the UN marching orders). Successive regional peacekeeping missions, aimed at combating terror attacks by Al Shabaab and Islamic State, have been in Somalia since 2007.

However, the deployments from Somalia’s neighbours have been complicated by Mogadishu’s row with Ethiopia over its proposed agreement with Somaliland to obtain access to the Red Sea. In response, Somalia cut its own military pact with Egypt, which has also offered to deploy a large force as part of the AUSSOM mission. That would reduce the allocation of Burundian troops, a move by Somalia which has been taken as a snub by Burundi which relies on the AU mission as a vital source of foreign exchange.

Meanwhile, there is still confusion over whether Ethiopian troops will be part of AUSSOM. Somali officials had repeatedly insisted that it would not welcome their forces because of the rift over Somaliland (Dispatches 12/11/24, Defence Minister insists Ethiopia not be part of new AU mission). Last week the Foreign Ministry in Addis Ababa reported that Defence Minister Aisha Mohammed had held talks with Somali officials to discuss keeping most of its 10,000 troops in Somalia and collaborating on the AUSSOM mission, though this has been played down in Mogadishu.



Related Articles

Mogadishu gives the UN marching orders

A 10,000-strong African force is mooted as officials plan to wind down UN peacekeeping operations

Set up at the end of the African Union Mission in Somalia (Amisom) on 31 March 2022, the African Union Transition Mission in Somalia (ATMIS) was supposed to...


DISPATCHES

Defence Minister insists Ethiopia not be part of new AU mission

The regional dispute is escalating as Mogadishu says Ethiopian troops are not welcome and have been excluded from the peacekeeping operation

Somalia’s Defence Minister Abdulkadir Mohamed Nur has insisted that Ethiopia will not participate in a new African Union (AU) peacekeeping mission which is set to begin in January...

READ FOR FREE

Al Shabaab wins on TV but loses in the field

The Islamist militia let the cameras in to demonstrate its durability as a force but then suffered a major defeat to a Sufi militia

The normally secretive Al Shabaab shed its shyness on London's Channel 4 News on 15 June in a filmed report from training grounds in Somalia, featuring one of...


New guns on the block

A military company run by President Museveni’s brother and some South African mercenaries is being financed by a mystery donor in the Gulf

Saracen International, a Ugandan-based private security firm, is the latest armed party to intervene in Somalia’s civil war. Speculation abounds about its true role. Just as intriguing are its covert financiers,...


Electoral process stumbles but stays on track 

The tortuous parliamentary selection needs more time, but the chances are that Hassan Sheikh, despite losing international confidence, will win

No Somali President was elected on 30 November, as scheduled, but it looks now as though the process will be brought to a conclusion by 15 December. It...