Burundi military opposes Somali withdrawal plan

AFP  |  Nairobi 

The army on Sunday said it opposed a request by the that it withdraw 1,000 soldiers serving in an African force in by February 28.

army said in a statement that the military would ask the government to argue for a proportionate number of troops be withdrawn from each AU member country, rather than solely Burundian soldiers.

is the second biggest contributor to the 21,500-strong force with 5,400 soldiers, behind with 6,200 but ahead of Djibouti, and

The is gradually scaling back its AMISOM force as Somalia's nascent armed forces are trained and deployed to replace them.

AMISOM was first deployed in 2007 to support Somalia's fragile internationally-backed government and fight Al-Shabaab jihadists blamed for scores of bloody attacks.

The request, made through a diplomatic document called a note verbale, came amid recent tension between Burundi and the AU.

The AU has called on Burundi -- criticised abroad for its record on human rights -- to ease its hardline stance on dissent and talk with its exiled opposition.

A key consequence of an eventual troop draw down is financial.

Participation in AMISOM is a valuable source of hard currency, and the scaleback is likely to have a big impact on Burundi -- every quarter, the AU pays it around USD 18 million (15.7 million euros).

That represents a major source of foreign currency for Burundi, which has seen funding from the suspended over human rights issues.

Burundi soldiers also earn much less once they return from serving with AMISOM, and an who asked not to be named said they were poorly equipped, and thus logical candidates for the first phase of departures.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sun, December 23 2018. 22:50 IST