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Kerry makes unan­nounced visit to So­ma­lia


John Kerry has made an unan­nounced visit to So­ma­lia, the first US sec­re­tary of state to visit the Horn of Africa na­tion that is strug­gling to re­build af­ter two decades of war and bat­tling an armed cam­paign by the group al-Shabab.

Kerry will meet So­mali Pres­i­dent Has­san Sheikh Mo­hamud, the prime min­is­ter, provin­cial lead­ers and civil­ian groups, US of­fi­cials said. De­tails of the trip were based on a dis­patch from a re­porter who was trav­el­ling with Kerry.

Somali officials were also kept in the dark, initially being told a lower ranking official was coming to the country where US troops supported a humanitarian mission in 1992 but suffered heavy losses when they were drawn into the conflict.

The trip “will send a strong sig­nal to al-Shabab that we are not turn­ing our backs on the So­mali peo­ple and will con­tinue to en­gage with So­ma­lia un­til we bring al-Shabab ter­ror to an end”, a se­nior US state de­part­ment of­fi­cial said. The US and West­ern na­tions pour aid into So­ma­lia to help re­con­struc­tion and pre­vent it from slid­ing back into the hands of al-Shabab, who still use ter­ri­tory they con­trol to launch at­tacks there and on neigh­bour­ing states, such as Kenya. Kerry will use the trip to thank the African Union peace­mak­ing force AMI­SOM for fight­ing al-Shabab.

With the back­ing of US un­manned drone strikes, AMI­SOM and So­mali troops have dri­ven al-Shabab out of most of their strong­holds. In Feb­ru­ary, the US named Kather­ine Dhanani as am­bas­sador to So­ma­lia. She is the first US am­bas­sador to So­ma­lia since the early 1990s, when the US pulled out of the coun­try as fight­ing be­tween ri­val com­man­ders plunged the na­tion into chaos.

The US pulled its forces out of So­ma­lia af­ter the 1993 Black Hawk Down in­ci­dent when a US he­li­copter was shot down over Mo­gadishu, killing 18 sol­diers. At that time, it was the dead­liest one-day in­ci­dent since the Viet­nam War.

Other West­ern na­tions, in­clud­ing Britain, have al­ready opened em­bassies in­side the air­port perime­ter, which is sur­rounded by heavy se­cu­rity.

Based in Nairobi

For now, Dhanani will travel to So­ma­lia reg­u­larly from a base in Nairobi, an of­fi­cial said. In a bid to shore up the gov­ern­ment and ex­pand its con­trol, So­ma­lia is due to hold a ref­er­en­dum on a new con­sti­tu­tion and an elec­tion for its pres­i­dent in 2016. So­ma­li­a’s pres­i­dent was pre­vi­ously picked by leg­is­la­tors who were them­selves nom­i­nated, not voted for, by their com­mu­ni­ties.