http://www.nation.co.ke/News/News+repor ... index.htmlAs the Kenyan military offensive against the Al-Shabaab militia in Somalia continues, a team from Nation Media Group has been accompanying Kenya Defence Forces.
Drawn from both the print and broadcast divisions, the team is in the southern sector where the Kenya and Somali borders meet by the Indian Ocean.
The team is operating under guidelines normal for such missions.
Ideally, the tip of Kenya, that southern-most place right next to Somalia, is in the same time zone as the rest of the country, and even Kampala in Uganda.
But the reality on the ground is a bit different because it gets dark by 6.10pm, and the sun rises very early, meaning that by 5.30am, the rays shining through the windows have us awake.
Start work early
The best thing about this is that one gets to start work early, and given that there are no matatus and the attendant noise, rude touts and no traffic jams, it is easy to get things going.
Although our colleagues imagined that we were going into a war zone, it is rather quiet at the military camp at Ishakani.
So secure is it that one colleague has suggested it is safer than some streets in Nairobi, and we can’t begin to talk about some of the capital city’s estates.
Just to prove that, we left the doors open on the first night, and not even the dogs wandered in.
Language: ‘Ras’ in Ras Kamboni lacks Rastafarian roots
Ras Kamboni, Ras Aliyoos and the other Ras in Somali had nothing to do with the Rastafarian. Instead they mean a protruding gulf.
Buur on the other hand means a hill. Buur Gabo means a small hill. Buur Gaal is the hill of the white men, a name derived from the fact that initially it was inhabited by Italians.
Those that might have gone camping as scouts will recall that every camp has a password, a secret code word called out as a challenge in case one has strayed away and wishes to get back in.
Forgetting it means you could be mistaken for the enemy and get shot, so remember that a password a day keeps the enemy away.
Kenyan reporting from the frontlines
Moderator: Moderators
- SahanGalbeed
- SomaliNet Super
- Posts: 19032
- Joined: Mon Dec 31, 2007 5:48 pm
- Location: Arabsiyo ,Somaliland
Kenyan reporting from the frontlines
- SahanGalbeed
- SomaliNet Super
- Posts: 19032
- Joined: Mon Dec 31, 2007 5:48 pm
- Location: Arabsiyo ,Somaliland
Re: Kenyan reporting from the frontlines
a different perspective however
A door-to-door operation has been launched to flush out Al-Shabaab remnants in towns and centres captured by the Kenyan Defence Forces and their Somali Transitional Federal Government allies.
Kenya military spokesman Major Emmanuel Chirchir said that the allied troops were conducting patrols and searching houses in several towns
The focus is to ensure that these towns and villages are free of Al-Shabaab,” Maj Chirchir told the Nation
Looking for weapons
The door-to-door search started on Tuesday and will cover towns such as Ras Kamboni, Mnarani, Burgavo, Tabda, Beles Qooqani, Dhobley, Busar and Jilib, which are now under the control of the Kenyan troops and the Somali army.
“The exercise is being run simultaneously in the Northern, Central and Southern sectors to ensure that no Al-Shabaab militants are hiding in the towns under our control.
“We are also looking for any weapons that could be hidden in the towns and villages as well as trying to obtain information from locals on the possible hideouts for the Al-Shabaab,” Major Chirchir said.
The Kenya Navy, meanwhile, announced that its operations on the Indian Ocean had so far eliminated piracy incidents around the Somalia coast close to Kenya.
Nation Media Group has news teams embedded with the Kenyan military at sea and on land though this report contains material gathered in Nairobi.
Besides flushing out the militants and impounding hidden weapons, the Kenyan troops want to open up the towns for international humanitarian organisations to deliver supplies, Maj Chirchir said in Nairobi.
“Today, the KDF forces at the battlefront were involved in patrols and pacification in the liberated areas and Al-Shabaab pockets,” said Major Chirchir.
“This pacification patrols reinforce the operation objectives and facilitate access by international aid organisations in the liberated areas,” he added
The Kenyan troops are on the third week of Operation Linda Nchi in Somalia aimed against the extremist militia blamed for insecurity across the Horn of Africa.
The ultimate plan is to capture the two Al Shabaab strongholds of Afmadow and Kismayu and allow TFG to take control.
It was not immediately clear whether the troops had captured any Al-Shabaab fighters in the door-to-door operation. Maj Chirchir however said the exercise would be extended to surrounding villages.
The Kenya Navy has in the meantime been conducting patrols in the Indian Ocean to keep out the militants and have so far sunk two enemy boats, killing over ten members of the Al-Shabaab in the process, according to the military
However there have been protests that one of the boats reported sunk was actually crewed by local fishermen.
In southern Somalia, the leader of the Ras Kamboni Brigade, fighting alongside TFG forces and the Kenyan military, said the areas freed from Al-Shaabab control urgently require food aid and medicine.
Mr Ahmed Mohammed Islan told the Nation the conditions are now safe for international aid agencies.
Mr Islan, also known Madoobe, said the entry of the Kenya Defence Forces on the scene led to the routing of the Al Shaabab,
which had taken over the strategic town by the sea.
“The people welcomed us here but help is needed. The aid agencies kept away because of the Al Shaabab but it is now safe for them to come back,” said Mr Islan.
He said the residents of Ras Kamboni, whose mainstay is deep sea fishing, have for long been deprived of the means through which they earned a living.
The fishermen at Ras Kamboni said they had to pay a protection fee to the militia group in the form of cash from their sales or give up a portion of the catch.
They have now been banned from fishing at night or crossing the border into Kenya, where they supplied restaurants and resorts on the islands at the coast. Kenyan authorities said their boats were at times used to smuggle weapons and ammunition.
It is also suspected that the easy access they had to the Kenyan coast and the islands along it made it easy for the suspected Al-Shaabab militia to kidnap Judith Tebbut and Marie Dedeu in September and October respectively.
The free movement in the sea also made it easy for pirates to launch attacks on merchant ships off the long Somalia coastline, often straying into Kenya’s territorial waters.
Re: Kenyan reporting from the frontlines
The first victims to Kenyan invasion would be the Somali donkeys. I used to hear Gaalo hate camels but never knew they hate donkeys too. Can you imagine an invading army killing innocent animals like Donkeys?



Re: Kenyan reporting from the frontlines
That must be a code word for Somalisudun wrote:The first victims to Kenyan invasion would be the Somali donkeys. I used to hear Gaalo hate camels but never knew they hate donkeys too. Can you imagine an invading army killing innocent animals like Donkeys?![]()
- SahanGalbeed
- SomaliNet Super
- Posts: 19032
- Joined: Mon Dec 31, 2007 5:48 pm
- Location: Arabsiyo ,Somaliland
Re: Kenyan reporting from the frontlines
pictures of the kenyan forces and their slaves .
army


army


- SahanGalbeed
- SomaliNet Super
- Posts: 19032
- Joined: Mon Dec 31, 2007 5:48 pm
- Location: Arabsiyo ,Somaliland
Re: Kenyan reporting from the frontlines
And here the slaves employed by the kenyans who do not really look somalis but say they are







-
- Similar Topics
- Replies
- Views
- Last post
-
- 2 Replies
- 82 Views
-
Last post by udun
-
- 14 Replies
- 1085 Views
-
Last post by shiniile9
-
- 35 Replies
- 3835 Views
-
Last post by zidane88
-
- 4 Replies
- 3146 Views
-
Last post by Dalmar1985
-
- 1 Replies
- 307 Views
-
Last post by ruralboy
-
- 2 Replies
- 297 Views
-
Last post by LaY-D_LicK
-
- 1 Replies
- 714 Views
-
Last post by XimanJaale
-
- 10 Replies
- 994 Views
-
Last post by Addoow
-
- 2 Replies
- 31 Views
-
Last post by The_Emperior5