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Somalia: Scores dead as Ethiopian troops push further into
Mogadishu
By Brian Smith
1 May 2008
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An upsurge in fighting in the Somali capital Mogadishu left
scores dead and more than 200 wounded, as mortars and machine-gun
fire rocked the city. Weeks of indiscriminate shelling have reduced
the once thriving capital to rubble, with Bakara marketthe
citys centre of commercealmost flattened.
The recent fighting, in the districts of Wardhigley, Heliwa,
Wahara Ade and Yaqshid, was started when Ethiopian troops, which
prop up the government, moved from their base at a factory in
Yaqshid and tried to enter areas not previously under their control.
Hundreds of families fled and bodies remained rotting on the streets.
The casualties...were caused by Ethiopians using heavy
artillery and tank shells in residential areas of the war-torn
capital. We condemn this latest fighting, said Sudan Ali
Ahmed, chairman of a local NGO, Elman Human Rights.
What we have seen on Saturday and Sunday [April 19-20]
was the worst fighting ever, said Asha Shaur, a civil society
spokeswoman. It was the most intense and destructive the
city has experienced.
Shaur appealed to both sides of the conflict to spare the civilian
population. The indiscriminate use of heavy weapons in populated
areas has one aim onlyto kill as many people as possible,
whether armed or unarmed, she said. Many of the newly displaced
were more often than not people who had returned from
camps ahead of the expected rainy season, explained Shaur. They
wanted to shelter in their homes before the rains.
The violence has swelled an already huge internal refugee problem,
with the United Nations World Food Programme already feeding about
1.5 million people, and the International Committee of the Red
Cross and the aid group CARE feeding many others.
The upsurge in violence comes as the country is on the brink
of a severe drought. Philippe Lazzarini, the head of the United
Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs-Somalia,
said 2.5 million Somalis were in urgent need of assistance. If
things do not improve within the coming weeks, and it is not likely,
then we will be confronted with the images of 1991-1992,
when hundreds of thousands of Somalis died through drought and
violence.
Somali President Abdullahi Yusuf says civilians who have been
killed in attacks by Transitional Federal Government (TFG) and
Ethiopian troops have only themselves to blame, because they allow
Islamist fighters to use their neighbourhoods to launch attacks.
Yusuf also insisted that aid agencies are lying about the number
of people who need humanitarian assistance, claiming that the
agencies are reselling food aid.
The TFG is only able to survive with Ethiopian military backing
and strong international backing from the United States and Britain.
Yusuf has renewed calls for the US and the UN support to help
the TFG.
Asha Haji Ilmi, head of Save Somali Women and Children, a Mogadishu-based
NGO, said that the situation had never been this bad in 17 years
of civil war, and that the TFG is making the humanitarian situation
worse by waging an economic war in Mogadishu. The destruction
and looting of Bakara market and the printing of fake currency
has led to hyperinflation, seriously affecting the populations
ability to cope, she said.
Amnesty International has condemned an attack during the recent
fighting, in which civilians were targeted at the Al Hidya mosque
in Mogadishu. Eleven out of 21 people who died there were killed
inside the mosque, including the Iman Sheik Saiid Yahya, Sheik
Abdullah Mohamud and several Tabliq Islamic scholars.
Eyewitnesses report that those killed inside the mosque
were unarmed civilians taking no active part in hostilities,
Amnesty said. Seven of the 21 were reported to have died
after their throats were cuta form of extra-judicial execution
practiced by Ethiopian forces in Somalia.
Amnesty called on the Ethiopian military to release some 41
children held after this raid. The safety and welfare of
the children, some as young as nine years old, must be paramount
for all parties, it said. Amnesty was told that Ethiopian
forces would only release the children from their military base
in north Mogadishu once they had been investigated
and if they were not terrorists.
Ethiopias government denied the war crimes accusations,
said no raid had taken place, and that the story was propaganda
circulated by al-Shabab. This is a completely fabricated
story designed to blackmail the Ethiopian army, one of the most
disciplined forces anywhere in the world, an Ethiopian Foreign
Ministry spokesman said. It will damage the reputation of
Amnesty International.
Al-Shabab, which means the youth in Somali, was
initially the youth wing of the Union of Islamic Courts (UIC),
but is now effectively its military wing. When the UIC was driven
from power in 2006 by the Ethiopian-backed TFG, many of its leaders
fled to Eritrea, but al-Shabab stayed and regrouped in remote
areas.
For the past 18 months, the rebels have been conducting an
insurgency against the Ethiopian/Somali troops and attacking African
Union peacekeepers. In the last few months, they have launched
many hit-and-run raids on small towns, only to disappear before
reinforcements arrive, with arms and military vehicles seized
from Somali government and Ethiopian troops.
The tactic began as an attempt to stretch the Ethiopian forces
supporting the TFG. But they now appear to be consolidating their
hold in some areas. They have recently taken control of Bur Hakaba,
near the seat of parliament in Baidoa, Dinsor and Wajid in south-central
Somalia, and the southern coastal town of Guda.
The US has recently added al-Shabab to its list of foreign
terrorist organisations, calling it a violent and
brutal extremist group with a number of officials affiliated to
al Qaeda. A senior member of al-Shabab, Sheikh Muktar Robow,
told the BBC he welcomed the US decision. Al-Shabab feels
honoured to be included on the list. We are good Muslims and the
Americans are infidels.
We are on the right path, he said, though he rejected
the US accusations that the group is linked to Al Qaeda. We
are fighting a jihad to rid Somalia of the Ethiopians and its
allies, the secular Somali stooges, he added.
For Ethiopia, the question of crushing Islamism in Somalia
is linked to crushing it in its own ethnic Somali region known
as the Ogaden, where it is experiencing growing unrest, and where
it has resorted to similarly brutal methods.
The Ethiopian presence, and its actions such as the attack
on the mosque, is having the effect of radicalising even the more
moderate factions in Somalia who are increasingly unwilling to
negotiate until the Ethiopian troops have left the country. This
is something of an embarrassment to Ethiopia and the US, which
supported the invasion ostensibly as a means of crushing Islamic
fundamentalism.
The Senlis Council, a European international policy think tank
that has strongly criticised US policy in Afghanistan in the past,
is equally scathing of the Bush administrations abject
policy failures in Somalia.
The US is the common denominator in both countries,
said Norine MacDonald QC, the council president in a recent report.
Instead of containing the extremist elements in Somalia
and Afghanistan, she added, US policies have facilitated
the expansion of territory that al-Shabab and the Taliban have
psychological control over.
The report also observes, The Taliban and al-Shabab are
successfully exploiting policy mistakes such as aerial bombings,
ongoing poverty, and aggressive foreign military presence to the
extent that they are increasingly viewed by local populations
as representatives of their legitimate political grievances.
Al-Shabab has made significant gains in southern and central
Somalia. This loss of territorial control is a very serious
setback for the government, commented a local authority
official in the city of Ufurow to the southwest of Mogadishu.
See Also:
US missile strike kills women
and children in Somalia
[4 March 2008]
Ethiopia steps up
military occupation of Mogadishu
[12 November 2007]
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