Al-Shabab Seize Somalia Town near Kenya Border

Local Editor
Heavily-armed Shabab fighters seized control of a Somali town near the Kenyan border on Friday after an attack on an army base that left several soldiers dead, local officials and residents said.
At least a dozen people, most of them soldiers, were killed in the fighting that began in late afternoon and lasted more than an hour in the town of Elwak.
Defeated Somali troops retreated towards the border some three kilometers away, leaving the jihadists in control, the sources said.
"There was heavy fighting in Elwak this afternoon. Shabab militants attacked the military base of the Somali national army in the suburbs," said Somali military official Abdukadir Elmi. "We don't have the details yet but there were casualties".
Witnesses said fighting lasted into the evening when the militants took full control of the town.
"Shabab fighters took control of Elwak town after storming the military base," said resident Omar Adan.
"More than 10 soldiers were killed in the fighting including the commander of the camp".
He said Shabab fighters entered the town disguised as Kenyan soldiers and riding in military vehicles they had captured from the Kenyan army.
A statement on the jihadists' Andalus radio telegram account claimed control of the town and said dozens of troops had been killed.
Al-Shabab, which quit the capital five years ago, continue to launch attacks against government, military, civilian and foreign targets in its fight to overthrow the internationally-backed government.
The group is expected to try and violently disrupt elections due to be held in September and October.
Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team
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