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Somali Islamists, Foreign Trainers Open Militia Camp

ISSUE 240
Front Page
Index
Headlines

Rayale Urged To Increase Women Representation In Government

Somaliland Seeks Us Help In Battle For Recognition

Somali Students Get US$200,000 Worth Of Books From Australia

Somali Islamists, Foreign Trainers Open Militia Camp

Mogadishu Port Reopened

Somali Taliban-Style Rebels Settle In

TFG To Work With Eritrean Rebel Group

Somali Info Considered For TV Bulletin Boards

Regional Affairs

Eritrea 'Ships Arms To Islamists'

Somalia: Islamic Courts Threaten Puntland

24th MEU Arrives In Africa For Training

African-American Senator Meets Kenya President On Visit To Father's Homeland

Somalis Now Seek Power Sharing Deal

Editorial
Special Report

International News

Israel/Lebanon: Evidence Indicates Deliberate Destruction Of Civilian Infrastructure

A Year Later, Family Still Searching For Justice

Norway: May Reconsider Return Of Somali Refugees

New Commission Ignores Inequality And Racism

Astronomers Say Pluto Is Not A Planet

SHARIA LAW FOR BUCCANEERS

China Goes On Safari

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

The Unspoken Half Of Black Hawk Down

South Africa's Asylum System Is At Breaking Point

Osama Would Vote Republican

Beware, From Mogadishu To Miami Al-Qaeda Now Wears A Black Face

And You Thought It Was Hard Starting A Business In Your Country…

Americans' Ignorance Of Foreign News Appalling

Food for thought

Opinions

Aids Became A Controversial Article

The Enemy Of The State Is Within

Why We Should Refuse Rayale’s Tour Of Deception

Open Letter to: Speaker of Somaliland House of Representatives

Non-Recognition Of Somaliland A Threat To Core U.S Interest

The House of Representatives: Don’t Just Talk the Talk; Walk the Walk to Save Somaliland

The Guurti Must Reform Gradually


By Mohamed Ali Bile

MOGADISHU , Aug 23, 2006 (Reuters) - Somalia's powerful Islamist movement opened a militia training camp on Wednesday with trainers from Eritrea, Afghanistan and Pakistan, witnesses said.

The presence of foreign instructors points to what many fear is a growing internationalization of a crisis that has split the Horn of Africa nation and threatened the slim authority of its interim government.

The Islamists' hardline leader, Shiekh Hassan Dahir Aweys, attended the opening of the camp for more than 600 Islamist militiamen at Hiilweyne, north of Mogadishu.

"You will study military tactics, because you will defend your country with Islamic morality," Aweys told the recruits.

Witnesses identified foreign trainers from Eritrea, Pakistan and Afghanistan at the camp.

The United States has raised fears Somalia could become a haven for terrorists. Washington has placed Aweys on a list of terrorism associates. He denies any al Qaeda links.

But security experts say some of his militia leaders trained in Afghanistan and gave safe harbor to al Qaeda operatives involved in a 2002 blast at an Israeli-owned Kenya hotel and a failed attack on an Israeli jet there the same day. a.

Diplomats fear Somalia could also become a battleground for Ethiopia and Eritrea, and have said more players like Libya, Iran and Egypt have quietly entered the fray.

Eritrea has long denied any involvement in Somalia, but a U.N. Security Council report said it has sent weapons to the Islamists repeatedly in a bid to frustrate rival Ethiopia.

NEW CLASHES FEARED

Meanwhile, the Islamists said Ethiopian soldiers and a warlord ally of the government had taken a town along the Ethiopian border, stoking fears of new clashes.

" Ethiopia and its allied militia have seized Bandiradley," Islamist spokesman Sheikh Mohamed Agaweyne told Reuters by telephone, referring to Somali warlord Abdi Awale Qaybdiid.

No independent confirmation could immediately be obtained.

Bandiradley is about 30 km (18 miles) west of Qaybdiid's hometown Galkaayo, and about 25 km (15 miles) from the border.

Ethiopia has repeatedly denied sending soldiers into its anarchic neighbor, saying such reports are Islamist propaganda.

But witnesses say thousands have entered the country since July to support the government, and Ethiopia has made no secret of the fact it has massed troops along the Somalia border.

The Islamists, who seized the capital Mogadishu and key southern territories in June after routing U.S.-backed warlords, have refused to negotiate with the government until the Ethiopians leave.

Qaybdiid was one of the last warlords to surrender his militias to the Islamists in a clan-brokered deal in July.

Tensions have been running high in Galkaayo since he returned there two weeks ago with more fighters and dozens of "technicals" -- pickup trucks mounted with heavy weapons.

"We are scared the fighting could hit residential areas where there are many women and children," one local elder said.

The Islamists oppose the interim government, based in the provincial town of Baidoa because it does not have the military strength to go to Mogadishu.

In the capital, the Islamists also held an official opening ceremony for Mogadishu International Seaport -- closed since 1995 -- to help bolster their claim of returning normalcy to one of the world's most chaotic and dangerous cities.

Source: Reuters


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