UK deploys first troops in Somalia to support UN mission
Nandini Krishnamoorthy
Prime
Minister David Cameron chats with soldiers from the Royal Welsh
Infantry as they stand in front of a Lockheed Martin Warrior Infantry
Fighting Vehicle (L) and a General Dynamics Ajax Specialist Vehicle (SV)
Armoured Fighting Vehicle, at RAF Northolt in London
REUTERS/Justin Tallis/pool
British troops have arrived in Somalia as part of the UN's
efforts to combat terror threats posed by the Islamic extremist group
Al-Shabaab. These are the first troops to travel to the East African
country, where Islamic State (Isis) had claimed its first ever attack by
blowing up an African Union car just outside the capital Mogadishu.
Up to 70 UK military personnel are further set to be
deployed there this year as part of the UN peacekeeping mission to
counter extremists. A group of soldiers will offer medical, logistical
and engineering support to the African Union Mission in Somalia.
Defence Secretary Michael Fallon has said the move reinforces the UK's commitment to targeting terrorism around the world.
"This deployment is another demonstration of the flexibility
and global reach of our Armed Forces. Alongside our efforts in Iraq,
Syria, and Nigeria, it shows our determination to tackle terrorism
wherever it rears its head."
Earlier in September 2015, Prime Minister David Cameron had
announced that the UK would send troops to Somalia and South Sudan, as
part of the Strategic Defence and Security Review. He had also pledged
to deploy double the number of UK troops serving on the UN peacekeeping
tasks from the 300 currently deployed.
With an aim to support efforts to end of the world's most
destabilising conflicts, personnel would be sent to South Sudan too, to
provide vital engineering work to strengthen their infrastructure,
Cameron had said.
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