Al-Shabaab is responsible for more than half the reported
attacks carried out in Africa by militant
Islamist groups during the past 12 months, a think tank associated with the US Defence Department said on Tuesday.
Islamist groups during the past 12 months, a think tank associated with the US Defence Department said on Tuesday.
Shabaab also ranks
as the deadliest insurgency on the continent. It killed 4,834 persons in
the 12-month period ending on March 31, according to the
Washington-based Africa Centre for Strategic Studies.
INCREASED ATTACKS
The
intensifying violence in Somalia is consistent with an upsurge in
attacks by militant Islamist groups in eastern, northern and western
Africa, the think tank noted in an “infographic”.
Nearly
3,000 attacks were reported in Africa in the past 12 months — a 38 per
cent increase over the same period spanning 2016 and 2017.
Shabaab
was able to step up its lethal actions despite a greater frequency of
US drone attacks since President Trump's inauguration at the start of
2017.
A decade of counterinsurgency
operations by African Union troops and Somali government forces have
also failed to blunt Al-Shabaab's capacity to inflict heavy civilian and
military casualties.
Shabaab
launched an average of almost five attacks a day last year, most of them
occurring either in Mogadishu or in rural areas. Its 1749 violent
actions amounted to 58 per cent of the total attributed to Islamist
groups in all of Africa.
Kenya and
the four other African Union troop-contributing countries lost soldiers
in Somalia last year, but their numbers are not known because the AU and
the individual countries do not release a complete tally of fatalities.
A
total of 10,535 Africans lost their lives as a result of militant
Islamists' actions in the past 12 months, the think tank reported. That
total, while greater than the number of fatalities in the previous 12
months, is substantially below the peak of 18,728 deaths reported in
2015.
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