The Monitor (Kampala)

Somalia: Army Ready to Send 10,000 to Somalia

African Union peacekeepers at a guard post in Mogadishu. (Photo Courtesy Siegfried Modola/IRIN)

Karamoja — Uganda is set to send thousands of its reserve troops for deployment to Somalia if the US government provides promised funding for the mission, the Chief of Defence Forces has said.

Gen. Aronda Nyakairima, in an interview in Kotido District on Thursday, said: "We can even call up to 10,000 [reservists] but that will depend on whether the United States supports us or not." A final decision on the matter is yet to be taken, he stressed, but it will be anchored on "our conclusive talks" with President Obama's administration.

Top US diplomat for Africa, Ambassador Johnnie Carson, who was in Kampala to attend the African Union summit held days after the July 11 terrorist attacks, promised increased support to the AU Peacekeeping Mission in Somalia (Amisom).

Uncertainty

Uganda presently has more than 4, 000 troops in Mogadishu, ostensibly to support Sheikh Sharif's Transitional Federal Government that most African countries appear reluctant to directly support in its quest to rein-in myriad fighting groups, including the al Shabaab the US classifies as a "terrorist" group. Gen. Aronda, in the Thursday interview conducted at the UPDF 405 brigade headquarters in Nakapirimoru, made clear they require military hardware, armoured vehicles and helicopters and money for salaries.

Financial issues

"We don't want to overstretch our budget by calling up our [reserve] forces and then we have to even pay [their] salary," he said, adding: "To my knowledge, America has undertaken to support that undertaking; that when we call up [the reserves], they will do this. But we will be waiting and see what happens."

Defence and Military Spokesman, Lt. Col. Felix Kulayigye, yesterday said there are more than 100, 000 members under the Uganda National Reserve Forces that is commanded by Maj. Gen. Levi Karuhanga.

The reserve force comprises former soldiers who left active service within the past five years; Chaka Mchaka graduates (para-militarily graduates) and retired Special Police Constables.

"Ordinarily, reserve forces do their own things," Lt. Col. Kulayigye said, "But when there is a disaster or emergency, they are called up to augment the regular army."

Yesterday, Ms Joann Lockard, the public affairs officer at the US Mission in Kampala, said she is aware of promised American assistance to Amisom but has no specific details. "I don't believe any specific commitments have been made yet," she said.

On Thursday, Gen. Nyakairima said inadequate financing by the international community and failure by other countries to put troops on the ground could compel Uganda to re-think its continued presence in the Horn of Africa.


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Comments 1 to 1 of 1 Post a comment

  • chokora
    Aug 31 2010, 08:41

    " .. Uganda Ready to Send 10,000 Troops -- If U.S. Helps .."

    And if USA doesn't help then Uganda won't send troops - and the lives of many Ugandans will be spared.

    So, it is not as if the survival of Uganda is at stake. What are the Ugandans fighting for?

    Read: This is NOT Uganda's fight. Uganda has no urgent national security reason to be in Somalia.

    Wonder: Considering the current outrage from Museveni's buddy-in-mass-murder Kagame - that his contributions to the UN do not shield him, or earn him a reprieve, from censor for his genocidal atrocities - is Museveni similarly seeking protection (once out of office) for his decades of slaughter - with millions of lives of his own people cut short? By sacrificing the lives of Ugandans - especially the hated ethnicities within his army's ranks? [Of course he doesn't care for other people's lives. He would save his own at any cost.]

    The name for Musevenies troops is "Museveni's mercenaries".

    Why must Ugandans sacrifice the lives of their young men in the prime of their lives - for a foreign imperial power? Centuries' worth. When is enough enough?

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