
Monday, December 24, 2007
By Aweys Yusuf and Abdi Sheikh
Armed with AK-47s, the soldiers streamed off a Ugandan cargo plane and marched towards an AU base close to
"We are privileged to have Burundian troops deploying here," said AU force commander Major General Levi Karuhanga.
"We appeal to other African countries that pledged peacekeepers to emulate
The day before, some 100
"The Burundian troops have a mission here. They will occupy key positions in the capital," said AU spokesman Paddy Ankunda.
"It could be Bakara (market) or anywhere else to cease hostilities, but we cannot reveal it now for security reasons."
Burunidan soldiers jump off the back of a military transport plane after their arrival in Mogadishu's International Airport. Around 100 Burundian soldiers arrived in Somalia on Sunday as part of an African Union peacekeeping force trying to stabilise the war-torn country, an AU official said.
Burundi

(AFP/AU-HO)
Without support, the Ugandans have been restricted to guarding
However, they have been unable to make much impact on an Islamist-led insurgency against Ethiopian-backed government troops that has uprooted hundreds of thousands of Somalis.
Government troops and insurgents exchanged automatic gunfire and mortar rounds inside
"After the fighting stopped, I came out of my shop and saw three dead soldiers," said shopkeeper Mohamed Bashir Hashi.
Persistent insecurity has deterred many nations from sending troops to the country, mired in lawlessness since warlords ousted a dictator in 1991.
As they prepared to board the aircraft in
"I am not frightened at all. We have been well prepared for the peacekeeping mission," said Corporal Gerard Niyonkuru. "We will accomplish our duty of protecting the Somali people."
The