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Mogadishu Faction Fighters Regroup
ISSUE 222
Front Page
Index

This Week's Somaliland News

Headlines

Rayale Seeking Change In The ‎Leadership Of The Lower House

Majeerteenya Spreads Lawlessness In Somalia‎

Ethiopia To Use Somaliland's Port‎‎‎‎‎‎‎

Mogadishu Tensions Soar As Islamists Declare Jihad On Warlords‎

Militias From Majeerteenya On A Killing Spree‎‎

Shame of a semi-arid region condemned to self-destruction‎

Is the risky business of exploring in anarchic Somalia risking the peace ‎in Puntland?‎

Regional Affairs

No one killed in Puntland operations, Range insists

Ethiopia, Djibouti Sign Power Interconnection Agreement‎

Somalia: Islamists And Warlords Fight for Mogadishu‎

Americans In Horn Of Africa Using New Weapon In Terror War

Navy Says Yemen Pirate Fear 'False Alarm'‎‎‎‎

US Appeals For Calm Amid Tensions In Mogadishu

Politics: Somalia And The War Against Terrorism‎‎

Ethiopia Building 3 Hydropower Dams, Targets Exports‎‎

Explosion kills three, wounds 37

Editorial
Special Report

International News

Written Answers From UK’s House Of Lords

Terror List Snagging Too Many Americans With `Wrong' Name

Celebration Of May 18 In London‎‎‎

Interpol Join Hunt For Killer‎

BAT Shuts Down Its Ugandan Factory

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

SOMALILAND: ANOTHER COUNTRY‎

DISTINCTLY AFRICAN

The War On Terrorism's Forgotten Front

First home-trained Somali police officers graduate‎

Food for thought

Opinions

Somaliland Under Gag Order‎

The Arab-African Relationship: Racism, Denial & Mistrust‎‎‎‎ ‎‎‎‎

The Camouflaged Threat Of Yemen To Allied Forces, Horn Of Africa Region, And Red Sea Ecosystem‎‎

Who Is Rolling Back The Frontiers Of Democracy In Somaliland?

Time For Research And Development (R&D)

Common Wealth States Must Take The Lead And Start ‎Recognizing Somaliland


NAIROBI, April 19, 2006 – Two factions which recently clashed in Mogadishu are moving militias to strategic positions for a fresh round of fighting for control of the Somali capital, residents said on Wednesday.

Up to 90 people died last month in Mogadishu's worst battles in years, between militias linked to the Islamic courts and those tied to the Mogadishu Anti-Terrorism Coalition, comprising most of the capital's powerful warlords.

Fleeing residents said tension in the city was high as each side stockpiled weapons and ammunition, moved fighters into position and strengthened their 'technicals' -- flat-bed trucks mounted with anti-aircraft guns.

"The city is on the brink of war," one weary resident, Abdifatah Abdulkadir, told Reuters by telephone. "I saw several technicals belonging to the coalition patrolling our Bula Hubay neighborhood while Islamic court militia are stationed in our backyard."

Many Somalis believe the United States is funding the influential warlords as part of Washington's war on terrorism but the U.S. government denies it.

The charge has given the Islamic courts, funded by prominent businessmen, another rallying cry against warlords vying for control of Mogadishu. The courts are the only authority in parts of northern Mogadishu and mete out justice under sharia law.

"My immediate neighbors have already fled to Afgoye," Abdulkadir said. "I'm planning to take my kids to Bravo before the guns start blazing."

Somalia has had no functioning central government since warlords ousted military dictator Mohamed Siyad Barre in 1991, heralding 15 years of lawlessness. Neither the government nor the militia backers had any comment on the situation.

"START SHOOTING"

Ali Nur, a fighter allied to the warlord coalition, said his fellow militiamen were just waiting to pull the trigger. "There's nothing else remaining except to start shooting," he told Reuters, without elaborating.

On the Islamist side, fighters were closely watching the coalition's movements, ready to hit back if attacked. "We will not attack them but if they try to attack us we will defend our positions," one source close to the Islamists said.

One Somali analyst said there were signs a new round of fighting would be worse than the clashes in the barren outskirts of the capital last month.

"We should expect a disaster because unlike the previous battles this time round they plan to engage each other in the city," said the analyst, who declined to be named.

The recent violence in Mogadishu shows how little control Somalia's fledgling interim administration has over the nation of 10 million people.

Formed in neighboring Kenya in 2004, the government moved to Somalia last year, meeting in the southern city of Baidoa because of insecurity in Mogadishu.

Most of the Mogadishu warlords are lawmakers or ministers, while the Islamist factions have their allies in government.

Source: Reuters


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