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Tensions Mount After Ethiopian Troop Moves
ISSUE 252
Front Page
Index
Headlines

U.N. Briefed On Somalia Arms Trading

Somalis Unite With Horn Of Africa Partners To Address HIV/AIDS

International Thievery

Khat-Fight In Somalia Questions Islamist Position

U.S. Planes Carry Emergency Supplies to Ethiopian Flood Victims

Militant networks

UN envoy to visit Somalia to discuss peace efforts with president

Regional Affairs

Tents To The Rescue Of Somali Children

Suspects Confess To Terror Links, Says Yemen

Editorial
Special Report

International News

Al-Jazeera Takes On The World--In English

Thoughts form London

Annan Refutes Notion Of 'Clash Of Civilizations,' Points To Youth As Key To End Mistrust

'Thanks, Have A Camel,' Somali University Says

Five Genocide Fugitives Arrested in UK

The Continued Misunderstanding of the Salafi Jihad Threat (WP)

Why Sudan rejects UN troops

The Shame of the Nation: A Collective Perversion

Experts Agree Somalia Getting Help From Other Nations

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Somalia In Mid-November: Sparring And Waiting For Someone To Strike

An Official Visit Of The Speaker And Deputy Speaker Of Somaliland Parliament To Wales

Only A Spirit Of Give And Take Will Work

EDITORIALS: Policy On Somalia Baffling

A Moroccan Snub

'Al-Qaida' hits back in Yemen

Miraa Trade Grinds To A Halt As Flight Ban Holds

$ Billions Set Ablaze In The DR

Food for thought

Opinions

Djibouti’s Dangerous Games

Who Can Replace Sillanyo As The Presidential Ticket For KULMIYE Party

Gun-Trotting Mullahs

Somaliland Public Showed Good Sense And Fidelity To Principle

Mr. Hariir Bulaale’s Comments Against The Minster Of Information

Harbi Trading Company Fuel


By Guled Mohamed

Mogadishu, November 16 2006 – Tensions have risen between the Western-backed interim administration and powerful Islamists whose control over most of southern Somalia has thwarted the government's aim to impose central rule on a country in chaos since 1991.

The Islamists are just 30km away from the government's sole outpost Baidoa, where residents say Ethiopian troops are protecting President Abdillahi Yusuf's government and have dug trenches around its nearby military camp.

Residents said Ethiopian soldiers had moved out of the camp on Wednesday to man a checkpoint in Modmodey, a remote village within striking distance of the Islamists' lines in Buur Hakaba.

"The Ethiopians advanced towards Buur Hakaba yesterday," resident Abdi Ahmed said by telephone. "On my way from Baidoa, I saw nearly 40 Ethiopian troops armed with heavy machine guns in Modmodey. They checked my car and then told me to proceed."

Ahmed said the Ethiopians had chased away freelance militias that had operated the checkpoint.

One Islamist fighter, speaking from their frontline in Buur Hakaba, said Ethiopian troops were so close he could see them.

"This is the first time they have come this close," said the fighter, who declined to be named. "If I threw a stone I could have hit one of them."

But another Islamist fighter said the Ethiopians had retreated back to camp on Thursday: "Buur Hakaba is very calm now. There is no problem at all."

Ethiopia has denied sending troops to Somalia although it says it has sent several hundred armed military trainers there.

Somali Information minister Ali Ahmed Jama "Jangali" denied Ethiopian troops had advanced. "That's not true. There is nothing like that," he said by phone from Baidoa.

Both the government - the 14th attempt at central rule since the 1991 ouster of a dictator - and the Islamists, who seized Mogadishu in June and then advanced into the hinterland, are vying for control of the nation of 10 million.

A third round of peace talks in Sudan between the two sides failed two weeks ago and many fear war could spread around the Horn and possibly further south into Kenya and beyond.

A UN report, obtained by Reuters, says a web of nations and armed groups are fuelling Somalia's march to war.

Written by four experts from the United States, Kenya, Belgium and Colombia, it says at least seven African and Middle Eastern nations are providing arms and military supplies to the Islamists, who aim to rule Somalia through sharia law. It says three are arming the government.

The primary violators of a widely ignored 1992 arms ban on Somalia, the report says, are Ethiopia and Eritrea, which is allegedly backing the Islamists. The Islamists on Wednesday dismissed the report as "fabrication".

Source: Reuters

 


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