Tag: Mogadishu

  • Turkish Red Crescent & Istanbul Municipality to reconstruct Mogadishu

    Turkish Red Crescent & Istanbul Municipality to reconstruct Mogadishu

    Mogadishu (RBC Radio) Turkish Red Crescent and the IBB will work together in the construction of roads and pavements, collection of solid waste, environmental arrangement and the erection of an industrial site.

    Mogadishu Montage50 construction machines and trucks from Turkey have been brought to Mogadishu to be used during construction activities.

    In order for the project to advance, the IBB will send a team of 100 experts to Somalia in the next few days.

    Speaking to Anadolu Agency (AA), an executive with the IBB, Kamil Kolabas, said that they wanted to turn Mogadishu into a modern and contemporary capital.

    “The construction yard we will erect will be a site where concrete, paving stones and asphalt would be produced. The construction yard will serve Somalia for a long time. We work to see Mogadishu as one of the modern capitals of Africa,” Kolabas stressed.

    An executive with the Turkish Red Crescent, Mumtaz Simsek, stated that the construction yard provided jobs to 250 people.

    Once the project has been completed, Mogadishu will become a contemporary city, Simsek also said.

    Source: Anadolu Agency

    via Turkish Red Crescent & Istanbul Municipality to reconstruct Mogadishu | RBC Radio.

  • Al-Shabaab describes Turkey as neo-colonialist

    Al-Shabaab describes Turkey as neo-colonialist

    By ABDULKADIR KHALIF Nation Correspondent

    MOGADISHU, Sunday

    Sheikh Abdulkadir Mumin, a senior officer in Al-Shabaab, the radical Islamist group opposing the Transitional Federal Government in Somalia has criticised the role of Turkey in Somalia.

    The cleric made the hostile remarks on Saturday via the movement’s broadcasting system, al-Andalus. Sheikh Mumin stated that the humanitarian foods and medicines brought to Somalia by Turkish agencies are expired. He added that the Turkish intention was to ‘poison’ the people in this country.

    “They (the Turkish organisations) brought expired foods and medicines,” said Sheikh Mumin.

    “We warn the people from taking the stuffs.”

    The sheikh added that Turkey was engaged in a ‘campaign to assist Somalis’ just as a mission to advance its interests.

    “Its assistance is phony and driven by neocolonial intentions,” remarked Sheikh Mumin.

    Turkey is one of the first countries that responded to the plea to help the needy people in Somalia that were affected by the worst drought in 60 years.

    The country delivered the largest humanitarian goods in terms of foods, medicines, sheltering materials.

    Following a high profile visit by Turkish PM Recep Tayyip Erdogan, his family and close aides in August 2011, Turkish government promised not only humanitarian but also development assistance to Somalia.

    Ongoing projects in Mogadishu include renovation of Aden Abdulle Airport.

    via Al-Shabaab describes Turkey as neo-colonialist  – Africa |nation.co.ke.

  • Turkey starts work on modernising Mogadishu airport

    Turkey starts work on modernising Mogadishu airport

    By ABDULKADIR KHALIF Nation Correspondent

    Posted Sunday, December 18 2011 at 19:11

    MOGADISHU, Sunday

    Turkey has started work to modernise Mogadishu’s Aden Abdulle International Airport.

    Nine Turkish experts have been engaged in the setting up of a modern control tower from which all flights over Somalia’s territory would be monitored.

    “Mogadishu’s airport operates under the old system and is mainly used by aircraft from Kenya,” said Mr Aydin Sarik, the head of the Turkish team.

    Mr Sarik told journalists on Saturday that Turkish planes will start flights to Mogadishu after the airport’s infrastructure and systems are raised to world standards.

    “It will ease the delivery of humanitarian assistance and development aid,” he said.

    For nearly a year, a Dubai-based private company has been handling the airport services in Mogadishu.

    SKA Air & Logistics officials have stated in the past that the company had plans to modernise the airport, named after Somalia’s first president, Aden Abdulle.

    In late November, during a two-day visit to Mogadishu, Turkey’s Deputy Prime Minister Bekir Bozdag officiated a number of projects his country would implement in Mogadishu.

    Immediately after landing in Somalia, Mr Bozdag laid the foundation stones for a modern tower and a fortified perimeter wall to improve the airport’s security.

    During a visit to Mogadishu in August, Turkey’s Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan promised that his country would implement multiple projects in Somalia, including in infrastructure and social services.

    via Turkey starts work on modernising Mogadishu airport  – Africa |nation.co.ke.

  • Suicide bomber hits Somali capital, dozens killed in south

    Suicide bomber hits Somali capital, dozens killed in south

    By Mohamed Ahmed and Richard Lough

    MOGADISHU/NAIROBI | Tue Dec 6, 2011 12:20pm EST

    (Reuters) – A suicide bomber struck the Somali capital on Tuesday, the latest in a wave of deadly attacks in Mogadishu, and dozens of Islamist rebels and Somali government troops have been killed in fighting in the south.

    The car bomb exploded 50 meters from the recently reopened Turkish embassy, near to the Kilometer 4 (K4) junction, a busy intersection in Mogadishu’s administrative district. A health official said at least three people were killed by the blast.

    The suicide attack piles yet more pressure on a Western-backed government that relies on African Union troops to prop it up and fight an insurgency by Islamist militants who control virtually all of Somalia outside Mogadishu.

    Witnesses told Reuters that the security forces stopped the vehicle earlier, before moving the car to a quieter sideroad.

    “The troops tried to question the driver and take photographs when the suicide bomber detonated his bomb,” Abdiweli Elmi, a policeman on patrol at the junction said.

    Two policemen and one civilian were killed, Elmi said.

    A Reuters witness said human body parts could be seen around the ripped-apart car and security forces fired into the air to disperse the crowds.

    There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack. Suspicion is likely to fall on al Shabaab rebels.

    The al Qaeda-linked militants, who have fought the government since 2007, have intensified the frequency of suicide attacks in Mogadishu since withdrawing from most of their bases in the capital in August.

    A Turkish government official said the target of the attack was unknown. None of Turkey’s embassy staff hurt.

    Turkey was the first state from outside the immediate region to open an embassy in Mogadishu.

    Its interests have been the target of violent incidents since Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan visited Mogadishu in August. Erdogan was the first leader from outside Africa to visit the capital for nearly two decades.

    HEAVY FIGHTING, AIR STRIKES

    The rebels, who control large swathes of Somalia, are also fighting against Somali government and Kenyan troops in the rebel-controlled southern and central parts of the country. Ethiopian forces have also crossed into Somalia.

    More than 40 militants and 11 Somali government troops were killed in weekend fighting in the town of Hayo, between the Kenyan border and the al Shabaab stronghold of Afmadow in southern Somalia, a Kenyan military spokesman said on Tuesday.

    Emmanuel Chirchir said Kenyan jets had also launched air strikes on al Shabaab bases on Monday, and that it was too early to give an assessment of damage.

    Kenya is eight weeks into an offensive inside Somalia to crush rebel networks but the military campaign has become bogged down by heavy rains and lack of clear strategy, diplomats say.

    “(Kenyan) jets targeted two al Shabaab camps south of Afmadow town, killing a number of al Shabaab fighters, and destroyed technical vehicles,” Chirchir said, referring to the machinegun-mounted trucks used by the militants.

    A lawmaker from Somalia’s Lower Juba region that borders Kenya and nearby residents said al Shabaab had only clung on to Hayo for a few hours before government troops regained control.

    The Kenyan government agreed on Tuesday that its force in southern Somalia should become part of the AU peacekeeping force (AMISOM) in the anarchic country.

    Earlier this month, Kenya offered to boost AMISOM, which numbers about 9,400 and is made up of troops from Uganda and Burundi. Both the AU and regional bloc IGAD said they supported the idea of integrating the Kenyan soldiers.

    “The cabinet … approved the re-hatting of the Kenya Defence Forces in Somalia to AMISOM, subject to approval by parliament,” the president’s office said.

    “This has been done at the request of the African Union to enhance a combined strategy for the operation against al Shabaab,” it said in a statement.

    However, analysts said it might not be that straightforward for Kenyan soldiers to become part of AMISOM – unless Nairobi is prepared to contribute the cost of its mission in Somalia.

    If Kenya wants AMISOM to help fund its operation on the ground as part of the African Union force, the U.N. Security Council would need to approve extra funding, analysts said.

    The AMISOM force is also capped at 12,000 soldiers. Uganda, Burundi and Djibouti have already committed to raising troop numbers to the mandated ceiling by early next year. Raising that limit cap would require a vote at the U.N.’s Security Council.

    (Additional reporting by Abdi Sheikh in Mogadishu, Sahra Abdi in Nairobi and Jonathon Burch in Ankara; Writing by Richard Lough; Editing by Louise Ireland)

    via Suicide bomber hits Somali capital, dozens killed in south | Reuters.