Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn has said Ethiopia is
“anxious” to pull its forces out of Somalia “as soon as possible” and
called on the African Union force in the country to speed up its
deployment.
Answering questions by members of parliament, Hailemariam said the
main issue for Ethiopia was “to accelerate our complete withdrawal
towards our border” with Somalia, a statement on the Ethiopian foreign
affairs ministry website said.
Unlike other regional governments, whose forces are part of AMISOM —
Uganda, Kenya, Burundi, Djibouti, and more recently Sierra Leone —
Ethiopia’s are not and their deployment costs are not covered by the AU.
The Ethiopian troops crossed into southwestern Somalia in November
2011 and have been decisive in routing the Shebab extremists and
maintaining control over areas clawed back from their control.
But in mid-March, Ethiopia pulled its troops from the southern town
of Hudur without warning, leading to the Shebab immediately taking back
the town, their first real military success since they were chased out
of Mogadishu in August 2011.
The surprise and unexplained withdrawal from Hudur caused speculation
that Ethiopia was starting a wider pullout from Somalia and sparked
fears that it would lead to a security void and a possible return of the
Shebab.
Hailemariam recently promised the Somali authorities that his troops
would pull out only once they had been replaced by AMISOM forces.
Hailemariam on Wednesday in Nairobi met with Kenyan President Uhuru
Kenyatta, whose country is one of the main contributing nations to
AMISOM.
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