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Nuseyba bintkab
03-22-2007, 04:38 PM
Civilians flee Mogadishu clashes



At least 40,000 Somalis have fled due to violence since the beginnning of the year [AFP]


Hundreds of civilians are reportedly fleeing Mogadishu after further fighting erupted between Ethiopian troops and armed men in the Somali capital.

Residents pushed carts loaded with their belongings through the city after the government ordered them to leave certain areas for "security reasons".




Ethiopians tanks reportedly opened fire when a Somali government base they were guarding came under attack on Thursday and troops in a southern neighbourhood were seen shooting into the air.
A Mogadishu resident said that another battle had broken out in the northern Ramadhan neighbourhood.





Amina Sabriye, a mother-of-six, told the AFP news agency as she fled from the Shirkole neighbourhood: "All the fighting sides are making warlike statements and are preparing for war.

"The worst decision is to stay one more day in Mogadishu."

Mohamed Mukhtar Sadiq, another resident, said: "I have never seen a mass exodus at this scale in the recent years."


Salad Ali Jelle, the deputy defence minister, told a news conference on Thursday: "The fighting in Mogadishu will not stop until we defeat them [the insurgents].

"We will pursue our aim of stabilising Mogadishu. This plan will not be hampered by a few individuals," he said, referring to a planned government crackdown on armed groups in the capital.

He also claimed al-Qaeda had named Aden Hashi Ayro as its leader in Mogadishu and he had commanded the recent violence.

"After Somali terrorists made consultations with al-Qaeda, Ayro was named as chief of al-Qaeda in Mogadishu," he said.

Order rejected

The Hawiye clan, seen by many as the instigators of many of the recent attacks in Mogadishu, have rejected the order to leave and accused the government of planning an assault against the clan.


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Most of the Islamist Courts Union fighters, who controlled Mogadishu until they were forced out by Ethiopian and Somali interim government forces in late December, are drawn from the clan.

"We see this war as an act of aggression," Ahmed Dirie, a clan spokesman, said.

At least 40,000 people have been displaced by violence since the start of the year.

After Ethiopian troops entered Somalia to help the interim government defeat the Islamic Courts the movement vowed to conduct a guerrilla war against them.

Dangerous 'quagmire'

The bodies of several soldiers either from the Somali interim government forces and Ethiopian army were apparently dragged through the streets by an angry crowd fighting on Wednesday that left about 60 people dead.

However, in an exclusive interview with Al Jazeera's Andrew Simmons, Meles Zenawi, the Ethiopian prime minister, denied his soldiers were trapped in a dangerous "quagmire" in Somalia.

"We are not in a quagmire now; we have completed our first phase of withdrawal, we'll complete our second phase of withdrawal in a few days' time and things are improving in Somalia," he said.

Zenawi also claimed that the security problems in Mogadishu had been exaggerated.

"Of course, there are challenges in Mogadishu, but the rest of Somalia is very stable and even in the case of Mogadishu, taking into consideration the fact that this is a city of 2.2 million people, awash with guns, the type of security challenge we currently face are not all that unexpected or alarming," he said.

One of the leaders of the Islamic Courts has defended the violence, saying people had a right to defend themselves against foreign invasions.





Source: Al Jazeera and agencies


Related:
Heavy fighting erupts in Mogadishu
(21 Mar 2007)
Somali president moves to Mogadishu
(13 Mar 2007)
AU troops under attack in Mogadishu
(07 Mar 2007)
Thousands flee Mogadishu fighting
(25 Feb 2007)
Somali presidential palace shelled
(13 Mar 2007)
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Abdihakim
03-24-2007, 09:44 PM
god help the somalis!
they are all suffering under the hands of intruders.
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ummAbdillah
03-24-2007, 09:53 PM
asalamu alaykum,
may allah bring peace to somalia, the somalian people have been through so much in the last decade also.
wa salaam
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