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10 Killed In Somali Airport Clashes

ISSUE 242
Front Page
Index
Headlines

Rayale Fails To Raise The Issue Of Igad Troop Deployment To Somaliland With Meles

''An Interim Agreement Gives Islamists An Edge In Somalia''

Somaliland, the Horn of Africa and US Policy

Somalia To Get Peace-Keepers

President Stresses Iran, Djibouti Common Political Views

A New Use For Camel's Milk: Sell It Abroad

The Crisis In The Horn Of Africa: Nomads With No Future

Somalia Warns Uganda On Troops

Regional Affairs

Ethiopia: Banking At The Somaliland Border

Pastoralists Call On Governments To Improve Legislation On Livestock Sales - Report

Somalia Stutters Towards Stability

Negotiators For Somali Government, Islamists Hold Face-To-Face Talks In Sudan

Editorial
Special Report

International News

US Moves Nairobi Embassy Bomb Suspect To Cuba

US Struggles For New Somalia Policy

Brothers' Epic Feat For Charity

Cinema Is Now A Crime In Somalia

Toll hits 30 after more Somalis murdered

World In Danger Of Missing Sanitation Target; Drinking-Water Target Also At Risk, New Report Shows

Coping With Terror Threat To Tourism

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Respect Tribes: They Do What Weak States Cannot

Remarks Made By Dr. Saad Noor At The Washington Post’s Debate On The Islamic Courts And Their Possible Influence In The Horn Region Of Africa

Somali Islamists Ban Music; "Intimidated" Top Artist Agree

Somalia's Money Lifeline Is In Limbo

America’s Somali Policy Still Dangerously Adrift

Somalis Left To A Life In Limbo As Peace Talks Are Put On Hold

Food for thought

Opinions

Somaliland : Love It Or Leave It

Protection Of Taxpayers’ Rights

The ICG Report Was A True Reflection Of The Facts On The Ground In Somaliland

Open Letter To Somalilanders Specially To SOPRI Conference Participants

Crying For Somaliland

Somalia : Cutting Through The Fog

UNDP/WORLD Bank Mission For JNA Undermined Somaliland Political Integrity

The Theory of Backwardness and Somalia/Somaliland Political Stage


Somalia's Islamists control much of the south of the country

Baidoa, Somalia, September 04, 2006 – 10 people have been killed in fighting between police and militia fighters in the Somali town of Baidoa, the current seat of the national government.

Several other people were wounded in the clashes that police say were unrelated to peace talks being held in Sudan between Somalia's weak transitional government and the country's increasingly powerful Islamic movement.

Police say they moved to evict militias who had set up at Baidoa's airport after having been dismissed as airport security workers.

The prime minister, Ali Mohamed Gedi, said he and his government regretted the incident, but said it had been necessary to ensure safety at the airport.

"The government has plans to set up a camp at the airport, which the militiamen had occupied," Gedi said. "We want policemen to take control of the airport."

Earlier, police and witnesses said 12 people - seven militia and five government security forces - had been killed in the incident.

Peace talks

The fighting came on the third day of talks in Khartoum aimed at easing tensions between the largely powerless government and the newly dominant Islamists that threaten to plunge the already anarchic country into further chaos.

Gedi says his government regretted the deaths in Baidoa

The Islamists, who seized the former capital Mogadishu from warlords in June and have rapidly expanded their territory to include much of southern Somalia, pose a growing threat to the limited authority of the internationally backed government.

Arab League mediators are attempting to broker a compromise between the two sides, who are deeply split over several key issues, including the proposed deployment of regional peacekeepers.

They are also at odds over the reported presence in Somalia of Ethiopian troops, denied by Addis Ababa, allegedly sent to the country to protect the government from   Islamist attacks.

On Sunday, the government proposed integrating its security units with Islamic militia to form a new national armed force as part of a power-sharing scheme. The Islamists have yet to respond.

The Islamists claim their battlefield successes entitle them to form their own government, but say they recognize the legitimacy of the administration.

Source: AFP


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