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Man loses leg in latest Mogadishu attack
ISSUE 264
Front Page
Index
Headlines

Main Opposition Party Leader Says "Release Haatuf Journalists"

Glenys Urges Somaliland Self-Determination

Jendayi Frazer: US Will Follow The AU Lead

A Note On An Evening With Gaariye At The University Of Washington

Diplomats Struggle On Somaliland Reporters Deal

ERITREA: Sources say writer and journalist Fessehaye “Joshua” Yohannes has died in detention

Once again, the west wages the wrong war

Iran Must Get Ready to Repel a Nuclear Attack

President Refuses Talks With Islamist Leaders

Regional Affairs

Donated IT Equipment On Its Way From Bristol To Somaliland

Ethiopians parade captured Islamist cleric in Somalia

Editorial
Special Report

International News

Putin blasts U.S. for its use of force

Senators Feingold and Coleman develop legislation aimed at strengthening U.S. diplomatic involvement to stabilize the war-torn region

Books for Understanding Somalia: University Presses Offer Scholarly Resources on This Troubled Nation

British Police Have Questioned Prime Minister Tony Blair For A Second Time

Plight Of Homeland Of Somali Asylum-Seekers

England: One Law For Muslims, One For The Rest

U.S. Official Pledges Immediate Help for Stabilization

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Regional Security Assessments Of The Somaliland Policies

Interagency Team Working Toward Restoring Effective Governance

Somalia's Oil And Gas Exploration Agreements

Using Insult Laws is an Insult to the Somaliland Media and Public – the detention and trial of Haatuf Journalists

Mental Source Of Faculty Of Law Students
Prepared by students who learn in the faculty of law & legal clinic, University of Hargeysa

The Census Issue Is Very Sensitive In Somaliland

Food for thought

Opinions

Analysis – TFG Games

No Special Treatment For You, Mr. President

The Corruptions And Current Somaliland Government

The Only Road To Peace In Somalia

Not Gadabuursi But paradoxical Manifesto

Manifesto Or Misrepresentation

Gadabuursi Manifesto: Giving Voice To The Silent Majority

What Are The Issues That Surround The Selection Of The National Electoral Commission (NEC)?


By Guled Mohamed

Mogadishu, February 08, 2007 - Assailants fired a rocket-propelled grenade in Mogadishu on Thursday, wounding four people in a pick-up truck, police said, in the latest guerrilla-style attack in post-war Somalia.

"We don't know what hit us, we only heard a big explosion and there was blood everywhere," said one witness on the truck, who declined to be named.

A wave of such strikes since Islamists were ousted from Mogadishu at the New Year have underscored the massive challenge facing President Abdillahi Yusuf's government to tame one of the world's most anarchic cities.

Since defeating the Islamists, who had controlled most of south Somalia since June, the government and its Ethiopian allies have been targeted with mortars, grenades, gunfire and assassination attempts on a near-daily basis.

The latest incident took place in a busy area near Mogadishu's Tarbuunka square, where an Ethiopian vehicle had just passed, the witness said. "There was an Ethiopian water-tanker ahead of us, maybe that was their target."

Mogadishu police chief Ali Said said four people were hurt. "One was seriously wounded, he lost his leg in the attack," he told Reuters.

On Wednesday, unknown assailants fired mortar bombs, wounding at least eight people.

A resident said two children were killed.

Somali Deputy Defense Minister Salad Ali Jelle told Reuters Wednesday's attack came from a location close to an old military hospital and was aimed at the port.

Officials blame remnants of the Islamist movement, some of whom have vowed holy war.

But instability in Mogadishu could also be due to tensions between warlords and clans in a city which has been a byword for violence since the ousting of a dictator in 1991.

"It is former officials of the Islamic courts who are funding these attacks, which are carried out by hired militias," Jelle said, speaking before Thursday's attack.

"The only way we can stop such attacks is by carrying a full disarmament of the people living in Mogadishu."

The government did launch a disarmament drive shortly after capturing Mogadishu, but few guns were handed in, and the exercise was postponed pending negotiations with local clans.

Source: Reuters

 


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