09:00 09/06/2015
New York - Somalia's prime minister predicted Monday that
al-Shabaab extremists will be defeated militarily by the end of the year
but he said tackling the root causes that attract young people to the
al-Qaeda-linked group will take some time.
Omar Abdirashid Ali
Sharmarke told reporters after a closed-door meeting of the UN Security
Council that there may be increased attacks during June when the Muslim
holy month of Ramadan begins, which al-Shabaab has done in recent years.
But
he said the military campaign by Somali and African Union forces has
been successful and the Islamic militants now control only 20% of the
country.
"We hope that in the coming few months the whole country
will be liberated," Sharmake said. "We are really on the verge of
defeating them in terms of conventional arms."
He
said he looks forward by the end of the year to having all states
liberated and stabilisation programs under way in every district to
revitalise the economy, establish rule of law, and start educating and
providing jobs for young people who now see no other alternative than
joining al-Shabaab.
Somalia
has been trying to rebuild after establishing its first functioning
central government since 1991, when warlords overthrew a longtime
dictator and then turned on each other, plunging the impoverished nation
into chaos.
The country's weak government is being supported by AU and Somali troops against the al-Shabaab insurgency.
But
despite major setbacks in 2014, al-Shabaab continues to wage a deadly
insurgency against Somalia's government and remains a threat in the East
African region, carrying out a series of deadly terror attacks in
neighbouring Kenya which has troops in the AU force fighting the
insurgents in Somalia.
"In coming weeks, we're going to go even
more forcefully against al-Shabaab," said Ambassador Maman Sidikou, the
AU Commission's special representative for Somalia.
He said the AU force, known as Amisom, needs to be reconfigured to make it more effective against al-Shabaab.
"We need to destroy them because that's the only language they know," Sidikou said.
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