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Africa Horn
Somali rebels claim capture of govt outpost
2006-12-24
Somali rebels claimed to have captured a frontline position from Ethiopian-backed government forces yesterday as the embattled Somali prime minister warned that foreign “terrorists” had joined the ranks of the rebel forces.

Prime Minister Ali Mohamed Gedi said 4,000 “foreign fighters” had taken advantage of the conflict to infiltrate the country, which has been lawless since the 1991 ouster of dictator Mohamed Siad Barre. “Four thousand foreign fighters have participated in recent fighting around Dinsoor district and some of them have been killed,” Gedi told a press conference in Baidoa, about 250 km northwest of the capital Mogadishu. “This shows how terrorists are gaining ground in Somalia, so we are calling the international community to be aware of (what is happening in) Somalia,” he added.

Rebels meanwhile renewed calls for Muslims around the world to offer support for the “holy war”, and claimed to have captured a key frontline position at Idale, some 60 km south of the government headquarters in Baidoa. “Our fighters have taken control of Idale and are heading to other parts where Tigray (Ethiopian) invaders are now based,” rebel movement information chief Abdurahim Ali Muddey said. “By the will of Allah, we will liberate our people and country from the Ethiopian invaders,” he said.

Information Minister Ali Jama did not confirm the seizure, but said “fighting is raging in Idale.” Witnesses said the rivals were shelling each other with mortars, rockets and machine-gun fire, causing heavy casualties.

With no sign of let-up in the fighting, the rebel leadership called on all Muslims around the world to join in the clashes that threaten to engulf the entire Horn of Africa region. “This country is open for the Islamic fighters all over the world to join the holy war,” said rebels’ security chief Sheikh Yusuf Mohamed Siad Indo’adhe. “Grave results will be witnessed if the international community maintains ignoring deteriorating situation in Somalia,” said Indo’adhe, whose movement has been accused of ties with Al Qaeda.

The fresh violence drew ineffectual calls for restraint from the international community, with the United Nations and African Union regional grouping urging an immediate end to the fighting. Ethiopia is supporting Somalia’s weakened government against the Islamist forces, which control Mogadishu and much of the rest of the war-ravaged Horn of Africa nation.

Fighting erupted early Wednesday, hours after the expiry of a rebel-imposed ultimatum for Ethiopia to withdraw the thousands of troops the Islamists say Addis Ababa has deployed in the country. The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said the fighting had left “dozens” dead. For its part, the government says its Ethiopian-backed forces have killed more than 500 rebel fighters since Wednesday, while the rebels spoke of slaying at least 70 enemy combatants.

Muddey said rebel forces were pushing back the Ethiopian-backed troops. “This war is between Somalia and Tigray invaders. The forces have been pressed and they are losing in the battlefields,” he added. “The invaders have been repelled, we have a lot of their bodies here and are going to show the media, we have their ID cards, pictures with their wives, and equipment,” he said.

The fighting on twin fronts has forced thousands of residents to flee. “People are really scared because both sides are using heavy artillery shells and other weapons,” Haji Hassan Dhubow, a resident of Goof Gaduud village southwest of Baidoa, said.
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Africa Horn
Mogadishu drums out a message of war
2006-12-17
I give it a 95 for the solid beat, clear melodic and butt-thumpin' lines of demarcation.
by Abdullahi Hassan, Mogadishu, and Rob Crilly, Nairobi
Lol. Note who's where.
ARMS are flooding into the city by sea and air, mosques are filled with a call to jihad and foreign fighters are arriving by the planeload: Mogadishu is once again braced for war.

For 15 years Somalia has been kept in near-constant anarchy by warlords intent on carving their own personal fiefdoms. Now the powerful Somali Islamic Courts Council, which restored a transient peace to the capital and seized much of the south of the country, is on a collision course with the near-impotent official interim government and its Ethiopian backers that could suck the entire Horn of Africa into conflict.
The Classic African Shithole™ converted into the Classic Islamic Shithole™. A very short trip.
Everywhere there are signs that the Islamists are preparing their supporters for battle. Vans with loudhailers patrol the city’s muddy streets, calling the faithful to join the coming war against Ethiopia. Friday prayers were dominated by sermons extolling the virtues of jihad as imams read from scripts prepared by the leaders of the Islamic council.

Residents say foreign fighters have been arriving at the airport, while diplomatic sources in neighbouring Kenya say the Islamist movement is equipping itself with anti-aircraft missiles to combat Ethiopia’s helicopter gunships.

Residents fear the onslaught of Ethiopia’s military might. Maryan Elmi, who has a seven-year-old daughter, spoke for many mothers when she said: “Our civil war was fought on the ground but this war will bring the Ethiopian air force. People want to flee but to where nobody knows. I am worried for my daughter.”

Tensions between the Islamic council and the country’s non-existent fragile interim government mounted last week. Islamist forces have encircled the dusty government seat of Baidoa where militias loyal to President Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed have dug in alongside thousands of Ethiopian troops.

"The Islamic leadership, accused by the United States of being in league with Al-Qaeda, has set an ultimatum of Tuesday for the Ethiopians to leave Somalia or face attack."
The Islamic leadership, accused by the United States of being in league with Al-Qaeda, has set an ultimatum of Tuesday for the Ethiopians to leave Somalia or face attack. Peace talks are due to take place this week in Khartoum but neither side has confirmed that it will attend.
That'll make for a short meeting.
In the past few days two heavy transport planes arrived under cover of darkness at Mogadishu airport from central Asia, according to sources in the city.
Let's see. Iran is sorta central in Asia. So's Pakistan.
A cargo ship has docked at the nearby port of Merka, believed to be carrying troops from Eritrea, which backs the Islamic council. “This is all part of the build-up to war but what is really worrying the international community is the sophistication of the weaponry,” said a western diplomatic source.
And from where does Eritrea get its weapons?
Doctors and nurses have been sent to the front line, which in some places is no more than 30 miles from the government’s stronghold. Food and AK-47 assault rifles are being collected for the militiamen who have streamed out of Mogadishu towards Baidoa.

The United States has pitched itself firmly behind the interim government as the best way of halting the spread of militant Islam. Jendayi Frazer, the US assistant secretary of state, spelt out the position last week: “The top layer of the courts is extremist to the core. They are terrorists and they are creating this logic of war.”

Sheikh Abdurahim Ali Muddey, a spokesman for the Islamic council, said America’s accusations were an attempt to divide the group. “I assure you that we have only one motive and that is we need our country safe and at peace,” he said.

This month America secured backing for a UN security council resolution to deploy African peacekeepers in defence of the government, despite concerns by Britain that the move could provoke a pre-emptive strike by the Islamists. The fear is that war could engulf the region because Ethiopia and Eritrea have lined up on opposing sides. Syria, Iran, Egypt and Saudi Arabia have been named by the UN as sending military or financial aid to the Islamist movement.

Matt Bryden, a consultant with the International Crisis Group, said diplomacy was running out of time. “If we don’t make the Khartoum talks work then I don’t think we have much chance of avoiding all-out confrontation,” he added.
Are you Ready to Rrruuuummmmmbbbblllleeee?
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Africa Horn
Somali Islamists accuse US of sowing divisions
2006-12-16
Somalia’s powerful Islamists accused the United States on Friday of seeking to divide their movement by claiming it had been taken over by Al Qaeda militants. The Islamists, who are girding for all-out war with the weak Ethiopian-backed Somali government, said Washington was carrying out a smear campaign to split the movement and hurt its popularity.
I confess. It was me. I dunnit an' I'm glad!
“America wants to divide us by saying some of us are Al Qaeda operatives,” said Sheikh Abdurahim Ali Muddey, the spokesman for the Supreme Islamic Council of Somalia (SICS). “We have no hardliners ... and America is just intending to derail stability in Somalia,” Muddey said. “We have only one motive and that is we want our country safe and at peace.”
"No matter how many people we have to bump off..."
His comments came a day after the United States blamed the Islamists for undermining efforts to avert a major conflict in Somalia and suggested that an east Africa cell of Osama bin Laden’s terror network had seized control of the movement. US Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Jendayi Frazer said the development had dimmed hopes of clinching a negotiated settlement to the current crisis.
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Africa Horn
Islamists’ call for national forum imperils Somali govt
2006-08-21
Somalia’s newly dominant Islamist movement announced on Sunday that it would organise a national forum to chart the lawless country’s future, further bypassing the weak government it threatens. At the same time, the Supreme Islamic Council of Somalia (SICS) renewed vows to fight the deployment of a proposed east African peacekeeping forces, plans for which were finalised last week, saying foreign troops were “not welcome.” In a move decried by the largely powerless transitional administration, the Supreme Islamic Council of Somalia (SICS) said it would soon host a “national reconciliation conference” to set a new course for the country.

“We are inviting all the Somali people to attend a national reconciliation conference in Mogadishu,” SICS spokesman Abdurahim Ali Muddey told reporters in the capital, which the Islamists seized from warlords in June. He gave no date for the conference. “Somalis need to talk to each other and resolve their differences at home without foreign interference,” he said, sidestepping questions about whether the gathering was aimed at forming a government to rival the current one.

“The last solace for that administration is foreign military intervention that is not viable in Somalia,” the official told AFP on condition of anonymity. “The Baidoa administration is a waste of time and resources,” he said.
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