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Around 90 Die In Somalia Militia Battles
ISSUE 218
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This Week's Somaliland News

Headlines

Somaliland Warns Puntland Either To Withdraw ‎Militia Forces Or Face Immediate Consequences‎

Press Release By Somaliland Foreign Affairs

3 Sisters Suffer From An Unknown Disease‎‎‎‎‎‎ ‎‎‎‎‎

Ali Mazrui To Wind Up Visit To Somaliland Today‎

“It Is Only Fair That I Raise The Question Was ‎It My Gender, My Clan Or Was It The Political ‎Affiliation Of My Husband” Amina Weris‎‎

Circumstances, Today In Somaliland!‎

The First Football World Cup For ‎Nations That Do Not Exist

Regional Affairs

More From Baidoa

Ikran Haji Daud: A Symbol ‎Of Hope For Many Women‎

UNESCO Builds New Offices And Classes For ‎Amoud University‎

Around 90 Die In Somalia Militia Battles‎

U.S. Navy, Suspected Pirates Clash‎‎‎

Ethiopian Airlines To Begin Flight To South Sudan

KHAT’S NO WAY TO GO‎

IGAD Regrets Failure To Deploy ‎Peacekeeping Force In Somalia

Ethiopia Does Not Benefit From Camels: Official

Editorial
Special Report

International News

International Day For Elimination ‎Of Racial Discrimination

Feed Gunmen To Save Somalia, East Africa Urges‎‎‎‎‎‎‎

Somalia: Humanitarian Response Fund‎‎‎

EU Offers Regional Body Sh344m

Somaliland Politician Visits Minneapolis

Young Muslim Women Wear 'Aussie Hijab'‎‎

Somaliland Congress must be fair and ‎acknowledge their mistakes‎‎

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

After 3 Years, Somalis Struggle To Adjust To U.S.‎

Altering The Hijab To Rules Of The Game

Student Rock Around-The-Clock‎‎

NORDEM Report 03/2006‎

Case Study Report

The Ticking Bomb:‎ The Educational Underachievement of Somali Children in the British Schools

Opinions

Congratulations To Somaliland Parliament ‎For Silencing Budget Nay-Sayers

Somaliland Is Being Sold‎‎‎

A Word Of Encouragement And ‎Inspiration To My Beloved Somaliland‎

Stealing My Fish, Adding Insult To ‎Economic Injury‎‎‎


By Somalilandtimes network

Somali militiamen ride a vehicle in Wajiid, south central Somalia in a 2004 file photo. Heavy fighting between rival Somali militia linked to Islamic courts and a new 'anti-terror' alliance has killed about 90 people in the last three days in the capital Mogadishu, residents and local radio said on Friday.

Somali militiamen ride a vehicle in Wajiid, south central Somalia in a 2004 file photo. Heavy fighting between rival Somali militia linked to Islamic courts and a new "anti-terror" alliance has killed about 90 people in the last three days in the capital Mogadishu, residents and local radio said on Friday

MOGADISHU, March 24, 2006 – Heavy fighting between rival Somali militia linked to Islamic courts and a new "anti-terror" alliance has killed about 90 people in the last three days in the capital Mogadishu, residents and local radio said on Friday.

Hundreds of Somalis have fled the capital and businesses have closed during the latest flare-up between fighters loyal to the powerful courts and warlords linked to a recently-formed political group called the Mogadishu Anti-Terrorism Coalition.

In what Somalis say is the worst fighting in their lawless Horn of Africa country for years, 37 people also died in clashes between the two sides last month.

The Voice of Democracy FM radio station said that 29 people had been killed on Friday alone.

"Civilians including women and children are shifting to safer areas in the south while others have left the capital," the radio quoted residents as saying.

Warlords have dominated the nation of 10 million since the ousting of former dictator Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991.

"Today we've lost five people shot dead," a militia leader on the Islamist side told Reuters by telephone as a volley of shots could be heard in the background.

"And on the other side, they've lost six who were burned in a technical," he added. Technicals -- battle wagons made from adapted pickup trucks -- are the favoured mobile weapon of Somali militias who mount machine guns on the back.

Some of those killed were civilians.

Reuters TV footage showed relatives crowding into a Mogadishu hospital, where victims lay with head and chest wounds. One unconscious baby had wounds to his head, arm and stomach. A fighter with a chest wound coughed weakly.

Technicals crammed with fighters roamed Mogadishu's streets and sand-dunes near the sea, as heavy gunfire rattled out.

"It's the Mogadishu anti-terrorism coalition causing this war," the Islamic militia leader said.

"This group said they were fighting against terrorists but it is innocent people who are perishing here. We will continue fighting until we save ourselves."

Members of the anti-terror group could not be contacted.

Local Islamists say the group was set up at the start of the year with the support and funding of the United States, which fears Somalia could be a safe haven for Muslim extremists.

In the 14th attempt to restore normal government to Somalia, an interim administration set up in Kenya returned last year but has been unable to impose authority. It remains based in Jowhar, outside the capital, because of security fears.

Renewed hope for peace came as the new Somali parliament held its first session on home soil last month, but the fighting in Mogadishu has underlined how tough it will be to end violence in a nation where warlords have ruled for 15 years.

(Additional reporting by Mohamed Ali Bile in Baidoa)

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Source: Reuters

 


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