* Three rebel bases seized
* At least 20 civilians killed on
Wednesday
* Clashes also erupt on border with Kenya
MOGADISHU, Feb 23 (Reuters) - Somali
troops backed by peacekeepers seized three rebel bases in the capital Mogadishu
on Wednesday, the government said, in a new offensive against hardline Islamist
militants.
The country's interim government --
whose mandate ends in August with no firm plans in place for what will follow
-- has struggled to end a four-year insurgency that has killed at least 21,000
people.
From early morning, Burundian troops
from the African Union
(AU) peacekeeping force, known as AMISOM, advanced block by block on foot along
the city's industrial road, which leads to the Bakara market, a major insurgent
hideout.
"We have captured three al Shabaab
bases," Defence
Minister Abdihakim
Haji Fiqi told reporters. "Our enemies have been weakened and
the fighting will continue until we have captured the city.
AMISOM says its soldiers have now
secured more than half of Mogadishu covering more than three quarters of the
population.
It was not possible to reach al Shabaab for a
comment.
An al Shabaab suicide car bomb killed at least 17 people near a
police training camp in Mogadishu on Monday.
Prime Minister Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed said there could be
further bomb attacks by the rebels loyal to al Qaeda.
"We understand the weakened al Shabaab may
plan bombings. But we are very vigilant and have brave forces," Mohamed
told a news conference in the rubble-strewn capital, unusually dressed in
military fatigues.
Ali Muse, coordinator of ambulance services, reported that at least 20
people had been killed. Residents said Wednesday's clashes were the heaviest
since the latest bout of violence began on Saturday. "Stray bullets pour
like rain," Muse said.
Separately, a Kenyan official said
security forces were on high alert along the border with Somalia because al Shabaab and
government-allied militia were fighting in the Somali border town of Balad
Hawa.
East Africa's largest economy has long cast a
wary eye at its anarchic neighbour where first clan warlords and now Islamist
insurgents have reduced government to impotence.
"We are on alert and aware that
rebel groups are fighting. They are fighting inside Somali territory,"
said David Ole Serian, provincial commissioner of the frontier North
Eastern province.
Kenya closed its border with Somalia in
January 2007. However thousands of Somalis still cross the desert frontier each
year to reach refugee camps in Kenya.
"Families living close to the
border have moved away with their belongings.
People are scared. School
children have been sent home and many Somalis have crossed the border,"
said primary school
teacher Ibrahim in Mandera, a Kenyan town little more than a stone's
throw from Balad Hawa. (Additional reporting by Sahra Abdi in Nairbi and Noor Ali in Isiolo; Writing by Richard Lough; Editing Helen Nyambura-Mwaura and Elizabeth Piper)
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