A former South African mercenary now living in Australia is running a private army for the breakaway Somali region of Puntland, the United Nations says. Lafras Luitingh, who lives in Sydney and became an Australian citizen in 2009, is under investigation by the Somalia Monitoring Group, a U.N. agency, the Australian Broadcasting Corp. reported. U.N. investigators say Luitingh is one of the main backers of Sterling Corporate Services and Saracen, two companies organized by South African mercenaries and involved in equipping a Puntland army. Matt Bryden, head of the working group, said the companies have provided little information. "There were a number of large shipments of military assistance for the force, and Saracen never sought to explain what these shipments were for to the monitoring group," he said. The United Nations has ordered an arms embargo in Somalia in an effort to stabilize the country, where the government essentially fell apart in 1991.
GMT 02:59 2017 Sunday ,16 April
Pirates hijack Indian vessel off coast of SomaliaGMT 13:14 2017 Wednesday ,12 April
Security forces free hostages held by piratesGMT 17:45 2017 Monday ,10 April
Somalia’s Puntland executes Al-ShababGMT 13:56 2017 Monday ,10 April
Suicide Bomb Hits Somalia Military Camp in MogadishuGMT 00:13 2017 Sunday ,09 April
Somalia's Puntland executes 5 Al-Shabaab militantsGMT 21:03 2017 Friday ,07 April
Landmine Kills 20 Civilians in SomaliaGMT 19:32 2017 Thursday ,06 April
Al-Shabab takes town after Ethiopian troops leaveGMT 03:38 2017 Wednesday ,22 March
Somalia's new president names 26-minister cabinetMaintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Send your comments
Your comment as a visitor