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Heavy Fighting Breaks Out In Mogadishu, 3 Dead

ISSUE 257
Front Page
Index
Headlines

President Rayale To Pardon Haatuf Journalists If Found Guilty

Demonstration In Oslo For The Recognition Of The Republic Of Somaliland

US approach on Somalia is not one to emulate

Heavy Fighting Breaks Out In Mogadishu, 3 Dead

Somalia: An Oily Cliché

US Used Ethiopia Bases To Attack Al-Qaeda In Somalia

Top Ugandan Defense Officials In Somalia For Peacekeeping Deployment Talks

Amnesty International: Journalists Charged With Offending The Honor Or Prestige Of The Head Of State

A Warning to Africa: The New U.S. Imperial Grand Strategy

Somali president says reconciliation meeting soon as step towards peace, democracy

Regional Affairs

Clan Violence Kills 43 In Southern Ethiopia

Burundi To Send 1,700 Troops To Somalia

Editorial
Special Report

International News

Heavy U.S. collusion with Ethiopia in Somalia invasion

U.S. Congress Approves Record Support For The Global Fund

Black Editor In Detroit On Somalia And Sudan

THE FIGHT FOR MOGADISHU:
The Rise and Fall of the Islamic Courts

Somalia for Somalis - "Leave Us Alone"

"Theater Iran Near Term" (TIRANNT)

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Oil in Darfur? Special Ops in Somalia?

The man with the mysterious horn

We are asking the wrong questions of Iran

Are African peacekeepers in Somalia to serve Western Oil and Gas interests?

''Somalia Reverts to Political Fragmentation''

Putin and the Geopolitics of the New Cold War: Or, what happens when Cowboys don’t shoot straight like they used to…

Ethiopia: Starbucks' Effort to Silence the "Big Noise"

Food for thought

Opinions

The House Of Representatives Have Done it Right

Somaliland Journalists Urged To Unite Against Rayale Atrocious Acts

The Satanic Sentences

Somaliland Auditor General Stated That No Foreign Currency Was Missing In 2005

Why Are We Failing To Unite To Get Our Country Recognized

Can Female Circumcision Be The Solution Of AIDS?

LET US VENERATE OUR LITERARY LIBRARIES


Internally displaced families sit under tree at a settlement in Lafoole near the Somali capital Mogadishu February 22, 2007.

By Guled Mohamed and Sahal Abdull

MOGADISHU, February 23, 2007 – Somali government troops and their Ethiopian allies used tanks and heavy artillery to battle gunmen who struck a military base at the former defense ministry in Mogadishu on Friday.

At least three civilians were killed by stray bullets and retaliatory fire as the violence spilled over into the nearby neighborhoods of Bar Ubah and Gupta.

"The government soldiers and Ethiopians fired back using heavy artillery as well as tanks. The fighting continued for close to 20 minutes," said a resident, who declined to give his name for fear of reprisal.

Interior Minister Mohamed Mahamud Guled "Gamadheere" confirmed the attack, but said there was no solid casualty figure yet.

Homes in the area were struck by stray bullets and shells as the government forces and a vigilante group fired back at the attackers in Bar Ubah, witnesses said.

Another resident who declined to be named said a civilian died after he was hit by a stray bullet and another was killed and nine wounded when a rocket hit a house.

In nearby Gupta, a woman died and six children were seriously wounded as three artillery shells struck their iron-sheet shacks, said a woman who witnessed the strikes but declined to give her name.

"One of the wounded is a boy with shrapnel lodged in his neck, and he was carried to the hospital with his neck hanging. We have no hope he will survive," the woman said.

DAILY DEATH

The interim government and its Ethiopian allies have been hit with near-daily attacks by unidentified gunmen in the Horn of Africa country's seaside capital.

They blame remnants of a hardline Islamist movement they drove out of Mogadishu and southern Somalia in a two-week joint offensive before the New Year, saying the militant group is paying $100 for each attack -- a fortune in the poor country.

Both the attackers and the government side have engendered anger among residents who are caught in the crossfire, and are fleeing the city by the hundreds.

The Islamists, who ruled much of southern Somalia for six months until they were defeated in early January, have vowed an insurgency.

Mogadishu is awash in military weapons and people with a grudge against the interim government, the 14th attempt at establishing central rule in a country without it since the 1991 ouster of dictator Mohamed Siyad Barre.

The government is awaiting the deployment of African Union peacekeepers to replace the Ethiopian troops and help stabilize Somalia -- a daunting task for a pan-African body that has struggled to keep peace in Sudan's violent Darfur region.

Uganda on Friday said it was ready to send 1,500 troops to join as the vanguard, but was awaiting the finalization of its mandate from the pan-African body and Algerian planes promised to airlift its soldiers and their gear.

"We will be leaving very soon," State Minister for Defense Ruth Nankabirwa told Reuters.

Soldiers from Nigeria, Ghana, Burundi and Malawi are also expected to join the proposed 8,000-strong peacekeeping force, which was authorized by the U.N. Security Council on Tuesday.

(Additional reporting by Tim Cocks in Kampala)

Source: Reuters


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