A Comorian soldier (L) shoots at the positions of supporters of renegade Anjouan leader Mohamed Bacar in Mutsamudu, the Anjouan capital, on 25 March 2008. A coalition of Comoran and African Union troops invaded the rebel island of Anjouan today hunting for its renegade leader and exchanging fire with his supporters along the way. Bacar's re-election last year as president of Anjouan -- one of three islands forming the Indian Ocean federation -- has never been recognised by the international community and he has faced warnings of an invasion ever since.
Cormorians from Anjouan carry a woman wounded during clashes between supporters of renegade Anjouan leader Mohamed Bacar and a coalition of Comoran and African Union troops in Mutsamudu, the Anjouan capital, on 25 March 2008. A coalition of Comoran and African Union troops invaded the rebel island of Anjouan today hunting for its renegade leader and exchanging fire with his supporters along the way. Bacar's re-election last year as president of Anjouan -- one of three islands forming the Indian Ocean federation -- has never been recognised by the international community and he has faced warnings of an invasion ever since.
A soldier (R) from a unit of Comoran and Tanzanian African Union troops aims at the positions of supporters of renegade Anjouan leader Mohamed Bacar in Mutsamudu, the Anjouan capital, on 25 March 2008. A coalition of Comoran and African Union troops invaded the rebel island of Anjouan today hunting for its renegade leader and exchanging fire with his supporters along the way. Bacar's re-election last year as president of Anjouan -- one of three islands forming the Indian Ocean federation -- has never been recognised by the international community and he has faced warnings of an invasion ever since.
A Tanzanian African Union soldier hits a man suspected of collaborating with renegade Anjouan leader Mohamed Bacar in Mutsamudu, the Anjouan capital, on 25 March 2008. The Comoran army said it had located the renegade leader of the isle of Anjouan, Mohamed Bacar, during the operation it launched earlier March 25, 2008 with the African Union to oust him. Some 400 AND troops backed by around 1,000 soldiers from Sudan and Tanzania launched a offensive before dawn to wrest back control of the isle of Anjouan from Bacar, its self-proclaimed leader, and capture him.
Comoran and Tanzanian African Union soldiers hit a man suspected of collaborating with renegade Anjouan leader Mohamed Bacar in Mutsamudu, on 25 March 2008. The Comoran army said it had located the renegade leader of the isle of Anjouan, Mohamed Bacar, during the operation it launched earlier March 25, 2008 with the African Union to oust him. Some 400 AND troops backed by around 1,000 soldiers from Sudan and Tanzania launched a offensive before dawn to wrest back control of the isle of Anjouan from Bacar, its self-proclaimed leader, and capture him.
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