Kenya under threat

MOGADISHU - Somali hardline rebel group al-Shabaab threatened on Sunday to attack neighbouring Kenya for training Somali government forces and allowing Ethiopian troops to operate from its towns.

The group, which is aligned to al-Qaeda, has said before that it would attack Kenya but so far has never done so.

Last year the insurgent group bombed Uganda in twin attacks that killed nearly 80 people. It said it was in retaliation for Kampala providing peacekeeping troops that have helped Somalia's government stay in power.

"Kenya has constantly disturbed us, and now it should face the consequences of allowing Ethiopian troops to attack us from Mandera town," al-Shabaab spokesperson Sheikh Ali Mohamud Rage told a news conference.

The threat comes in the wake of a new government offensive that has seen Somali forces claw back parts of Mogadishu.

Somali troops backed by government-friendly militia have launched operations in several towns across central and southern Somalia including the al-Shabaab-controlled border town of Balad Hawa, a few kilometres from the Kenyan town of Mandera, and Ethiopia. Somali troop numbers have been bolstered by the deployment of hundreds of new recruits trained in Kenya and Ethiopia, local residents and security sources say.

"We have never openly fought Kenya but now we will not tolerate any more. Kenya has been training soldiers to attack us. It has also given bases to Somali forces we drove away from Kismayu," Rage said.

Al-Shabaab has also threatened to hit Ethiopia and Burundi, which has troops protecting the Western-backed government in Mogadishu. Kenya has been a victim of al-Qaeda strikes twice in the past - a 1998 bombing of the US embassy in Nairobi and an explosion at an Israeli-owned hotel at the coast in 2002.

The fighting in Somalia's Balad Hawa has paralysed life in the Kenyan town of Mandera and forced residents close to the border further inland, an aid official told Reuters.

"Mandera is now a battleground. Several stray bullets from Somalia and Ethiopia have come towards us. So far more than 15 people have been injured," a staff member at a charitable organisation in Mandera said.

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