Ten African Union peacekeepers killed in Somalia attack, says Burundi army

Ten African Union peacekeepers killed in Somalia attack, says Burundi army
Heavily-armed al Shabaab militants stormed an African Union (AU) base in Somalia on Tuesday. Burundi's military said on Wednesday that 10 of its AU peacekeepers were killed.
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An insurgent group formed in the early 2000s, al Shabaab seeks to establish an Islamic state in Somalia [source: Getty]

Burundi's military said on Wednesday that 10 of its African Union (AU) peacekeepers were killed in an attack on their base in Somalia, while a security source in the region and a Mogadishu-based source said dozens were dead.

Burundi state television quoted army spokesperson Floribert Biyereke saying that 25 other soldiers were wounded in Tuesday's raid on a camp near the village of El Baraf in central Somalia, while 20 "al Shabaab terrorists" were also killed.

The security source in the region said several follow-up operations were going on after al Qaeda-linked al Shabaab militants overran the camp the previous day.

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The total number of casualties was not yet clear, he said, but "dozens" of soldiers were killed and about 20 were evacuated with wounds.

The African Union (AU) and troop-contributing countries typically do not release casualty numbers after attacks. Neither Burundi nor the AU responded to requests for comment on casualties.

Somalia is preparing to hold a long-delayed presidential election this month.

Political rivalries have split the security services, distracting them from the fight against the al Shabaab insurgency and sometimes spilling into gunbattles between rival factions.