AU, Somali forces sharpen skills to curb threats posed by explosive devices

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MOGADISHU [SMN] – The African Union Mission and Somali National Army (SNA) military officers wrapped up a five-day training course aimed at enhancing joint capabilities in mitigating the threat posed by improvised explosive devices (IEDs).

Gerbi Kebede Regassa, AMISOM deputy force commander in charge of support and logistics said the UN counter-IED threat mitigation course will help in countering the threat posed by IEDs and ultimately in the implementation of the mission’s mandate.

“The presence of well-trained and better-equipped troops to combat such threats will help improve conditions on the ground, build confidence, and in the execution of the force mandate,” Regassa said in a statement issued in Mogadishu on Friday.

“The skills you have learned in this course will go a long way to mitigate the IED threats in Somalia; they will further increase accessibility to numerous areas and ultimately contribute towards our ability to stabilize Somalia,” he added.

The training course attended by 22 military officers was organized by the AMISOM in conjunction with the United Kingdom Mission Support Team (UKMST) and facilitated by the International Peace Support Centre (IPSC).

Regassa said the knowledge and skills acquired from the training will also help AMISOM and the SNA better plan operations to restore peace and stability in Somalia.

“The skills you have acquired in this course will enable you to evaluate, plan and manage operations in IED threat environments. You are also now equipped with concepts, methods, processes and practices that you will be required to employ whenever you are planning for military operations,” said Regassa.

Torcail Stroud-Caules, commander of the UKMST, urged the military officers to broadly apply the knowledge acquired, so as to counter the threat posed by IEDs.

“Counter-IED is not about engineers. It is about mindset, it is about how you think about things; when you plan a route for logistics or plan a route for a patrol, the same counter-IED techniques need to be brought into play,” Stroud-Caules said.

AMISOM chief force engineer, Saheed Sadiq, noted that the training is timely and critical in countering IEDs, which the al-Shabab has deployed with devastating effect.

“The training that you have received here over the past five days will contribute to efforts to mitigate those threats. This can be achieved by ensuring that the knowledge you receive cascades to members of your groups, your formations, units and wherever you find yourselves,” Sadiq noted.

The explosive devices are the preferred weapon of choice for al-Shabab, who often plant them on Main Supply Routes (MSRs), targeting AMISOM and government troops, but civilians often get hit.

IEDs constitute one of the most significant threats to AMISOM peacekeepers, making the training extremely important, especially in efforts to defeat the IEDs.

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