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AteUp
12-25-2006, 02:07 AM
http://home.bellsouth.net/s/editorial.dll?pnum=1&bfromind=2219&eeid=5091715&_sitecat=1505&dcatid=0&eetype=article&render=y&ac=-2&ck=&ch=ne&rg=blsadstrgt

Ethiopia Declares War on Somali Militia

MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP) - Ethiopian and Somali troops captured a key border town early Monday, a day after Ethiopia sent fighter jets into neighboring Somalia and bombed several towns in a dramatic attack on a powerful Islamic movement.

Ethiopia's prime minister announced Sunday night that his country was "forced to enter a war" with Somalia's Council of Islamic Courts after the group declared holy war on Ethiopia, a predominantly Christian nation.

Residents said Islamic fighters left the town of Belet Weyne on the Somali-Ethiopian border overnight after Ethiopian fighter jets bombed Islamic positions on Sunday.

Col. Abdi Yusuf Ahmed, a Somali government army commander, told The Associated Press that his forces entered Belet Weyne early Monday without a shot fired. He held up his telephone and a reporter could hear street celebrations.

Meanwhile, heavy artillery and mortar fire continued to echo through the main government town of Baidoa on Monday, said Mohammed Sheik Ali, a resident reached by telephone. Government and Ethiopian troops were attempting to push back Islamic forces just 12 miles south of Baidoa.

Sunday marked the first time Ethiopia acknowledged its troops were fighting in support of Somalia's U.N.-backed interim government even though witnesses had been reporting their presence for weeks in an escalating battle that threatens to engulf the Horn of Africa region.

Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi went on television to announce that his country was at war with the Islamic movement that wants to rule neighboring Somalia by the Quran.

"Our defense force has been forced to enter a war to defend (against) the attacks from extremists and anti-Ethiopian forces and to protect the sovereignty of the land," Meles said a few hours after his military attacked the Islamic militia with fighter jets and artillery.

No reliable casualty reports were immediately available.

Ethiopia supports Somalia's interim government, which has been losing ground to the Council of Islamic Courts for months.

"They are cowards," said Sheik Mohamoud Ibrahim Suley, an official with the Islamic movement, which controls most of southern Somalia. "They are afraid of the face-to-face war and resorted to airstrikes. I hope God will help us shoot down their planes."

Eritrea, a bitter rival of Ethiopia, is backing the Islamic militia, and experts fear the conflict could draw in the volatile Horn of Africa region, which lies close to the Saudi Arabian peninsula and has seen a rise in Islamic extremism. A recent U.N. report said 10 nations have been illegally supplying arms and equipment to both sides in Somalia.

People living along Somalia's coast have reported seeing hundreds of foreign Muslims entering the country in answer to calls from the Islamic militia to fight a holy war against Ethiopia.

The Islamic group's often severe interpretation of Islam raises memories of Afghanistan's Taliban regime, which was ousted by a U.S.-led campaign for harboring Osama bin Laden. The U.S. says four al-Qaida leaders blamed for the 1998 bombings of U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania have become leaders in Somalia's Islamic militia.

The Islamic movement drove secular Somali warlords supported by the U.S. out of the capital, Mogadishu, last summer and have seized most of the southern half of the country, which has not had an effective government since a longtime dictatorship was toppled in 1991.

The interim Somali administration, formed two years ago with U.N. help, been unable to exert any wide control and its influence is now confined to the area around the western city of Baidoa.

Several rounds of peace talks failed to yield any lasting results.

Major fighting broke out Tuesday night, but had tapered off before Sunday's battles began before dawn and continued for about 10 hours.

Ethiopian Information Minister Berhan Hailu said before Meles' announcement that Ethiopian soldiers were fighting alongside Somali government soldiers in Dinsoor, Belet Weyne, Bandiradley and Bur Haqaba.

Witnesses said a major road and an Islamic recruiting center were bombed in Belet Weyne, and 12 Ethiopian soldiers were reportedly captured nearby.

"We saw 12 blindfolded men and were told they were Ethiopian prisoners captured in the battle," said Abdi Fodere, a businessman in Belet Weyne.

Less serious fighting also was reported in Baidoa.

"I think they have met a resistance they have never dreamt of before," interim Somali President Abdullahi Yusuf said in brief remarks as the fighting began to die down at Baidoa.

Suley, the official with the Islamic movement, said his forces had destroyed four Ethiopian tanks outside the city.

As Sunday's fighting wore on, the Islamic militia began broadcasting patriotic songs in Mogadishu about Somalia's 1977 war with Ethiopia. The two countries have fought two wars over their disputed border in the past 45 years.

Meles has said his government has a legal and moral obligation to support Somalia's internationally recognized government. He also accuses the Islamic movement of backing ethnic Somali rebels fighting for independence from Ethiopia and has called such support an act of war.

Leaders of the Islamic militia have repeatedly said they want to incorporate ethnic Somalis living in eastern Ethiopia, northeastern Kenya and Djibouti into a Greater Somalia.

The fighting is hitting a country already devastated by conflict. One in five children dies before age 5 from a preventable disease, and the impoverished nation is struggling to recover from eastern Africa's worst flood season in 50 years.

Government officials and Islamic militiamen have said hundreds of people have been killed in the fighting since Tuesday, but the claims could not be independently confirmed. Aid groups put the death toll in the dozens.

___

Associated Press writers Salad Duhul and Mohamed Sheik Nor in Mogadishu and Les Neuhaus in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, contributed to this report.

AteUp
12-25-2006, 02:15 AM
"They are cowards," said Sheik Mohamoud Ibrahim Suley, an official with the Islamic movement, which controls most of southern Somalia. "They are afraid of the face-to-face war and resorted to airstrikes. I hope God will help us shoot down their planes."

You have got to be friggin kidding me. A radical muslim calling someone else a coward.

eddiejohn4
12-25-2006, 08:43 AM
Ate up. lmao you hit right on the head. They resort to killing women and children and then accuse others of cowardess for not fight ing out in the open!

That statement shows how dilluted these goofs are. Similar to Bagdad Bob who insisted that they were slaughtering us by the thousands at the beginning of our assault on Bagdad. You could see our tanks in the background right behind him as he gave his propaganda speech.:)

AteUp
12-28-2006, 03:22 AM
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/16376154/

Islamic forces abandon Somalia’s capital

Clan militias begin taking control as looting breaks out in Mogadishu
MOGADISHU, Somalia - The Islamist forces who have controlled Somalia’s capital for months abandoned the city to clan rule on Thursday after government forces advanced to within striking distance. Looting broke out and clan leaders called for calm.

Gunmen who had been allied with Islamist militias changed out of their uniforms and submitted to the command of traditional elders. Gunfire echoed through the streets as the fighters began looting Islamist bases and buildings belonging to Islamist officials, witnesses said. One resident said three men and a woman had been killed in the looting.

“I have seen that the Islamists are defeated, I’m going to rejoin my clan,” said one gunman, Mohamed Barre Sidow. “I was forced to join the Islamic courts by my clan, so I now I will return to my clan and they will decide my fate, whether I join the government or not.”

Clans called on their young men to form militias to protect their neighborhoods. Hussein Haji Bod, a well-known clan leader, appealed for calm and said elders would meet Thursday to discuss the future of the capital. The government was expected to offer the clans a truce.

Residents south of the city reported seeing Islamist forces in a long convoy heading south toward the port city of Kismayo. The Arab satellite TV station Al-Jazeera quoted Islamist leader Sheik Sharif Sheik Ahmed saying Islamist forces withdrew from Mogadishu to avoid bloodshed in the capital.

No match for Ethiopia
The Council of Islamic Courts seized the capital in June and went on to take much of southern Somalia, often without fighting. They were later joined by foreign militants, including Pakistanis and Arabs, who supported their goal of making Somalia an Islamic state.

The Islamists seemed invincible after capturing the capital, but they have been no match for Ethiopia, which has the strongest military in the Horn of Africa. Ethiopian forces crossed the border Sunday to reinforce the internationally recognized Somali government, which was bottled up in Baidoa, 140 miles northwest of Mogadishu.

On Wednesday, Ethiopian and Somali government troops drove Islamist fighters out of Jowhar, the last major town on the northern road to Mogadishu. As troops entered Jowhar, an independent radio station began blasting Western music, which the militias had banned. Women selling qat — the popular leafy stimulant banned by the militias — crowded the streets.

The government forces went on to capture Balad, a village about 18 miles north of Mogadishu, and were just outside Afgoye to the west on Thursday, cutting off the seaside capital in both those directions, residents and government officials said. The government also had taken control of Baledogle airport, the most important airfield in the country.

Somalia’s complex clan system has been the basis of politics and identity here for centuries. But fighting between clans has prevented Somalia from having an effective government since 1991. That’s when clan-based warlords overthrew a dictator and turned on one another.

Competition for control of Mogadishu since 1991 has involved the Abgal and Habr Gadir clans, who joined to support the Islamic council earlier this year.

The Islamist militias tried to supplant the influence of the clans by appealing to Somalis as Muslims. Many Somalis were grateful for the order the movement imposed. But many also chafed at the strict enforcement of Islamic codes.

“Since the Islamic courts have taken control, people are walking instead of hiring a taxi,” said Hussein Mudde, a taxi driver in Mogadishu. “They don’t have money because the Islamic courts closed the cinemas and music halls. Poets and artists and performers have been jobless.”

Worries of new terrorist haven
The conflict in Somalia has drawn concern in the United States, which accuses the Islamists of harboring al-Qaida terrorists, and other Western powers.

The U.N. Security Council failed for a second day to agree on a statement calling for an immediate cease-fire in Somalia. Council members could not agree Wednesday on the statement’s exact wording.

The African Union and the Arab League on Wednesday called for all foreign forces to withdraw from Somalia, and for the government and Islamic courts to return to peace talks.

Meles Zenawi, the Ethiopian prime minister, said Tuesday he had been given unconfirmed reports that as many as 1,000 people had died and 3,000 were wounded since the fighting began on Saturday.

The Red Cross reported 850 people injured at hospitals supported by the relief agency in Mogadishu and Baidoa, but had no figure for fatalities.

The U.N. refugee agency said Wednesday it was readying staff, trucks and emergency relief items in neighboring Kenya and Ethiopia for up to 50,000 fleeing Somalis.

The agency said it had received reports of thousands of displaced civilians within Somalia fleeing the fighting.

quackrstackr
12-28-2006, 04:35 PM
Women selling qat — the popular leafy stimulant banned by the militias — crowded the streets.

Nice to see the streets safe again. :D :eek:

Multidigits
12-28-2006, 04:46 PM
Is that the same stuff they sell here in the red light district?

aceoky
12-30-2006, 12:13 PM
Is that the same stuff they sell here in the red light district?

:D :D :D Funny stuff!

gwhilikerz
12-30-2006, 01:29 PM
Wonder how long before we have troops there? All the while ignoring Iran.

aceoky
12-30-2006, 01:40 PM
Wonder how long before we have troops there? All the while ignoring Iran.


Not to mention N. Korea, Libya, etc.etc.etc. I'll go out on a limb though and say we will Not have troops there........

http://www.iht.com/bin/print.php?id=4055677

Gadhafi's Libya declares 3-day official mourning for Saddam

The Associated Press
Saturday, December 30, 2006
TRIPOLI, Libya
The government of Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi announced a three-day official mourning period following Saddam Hussein's execution Saturday and canceled all celebrations of the Islamic Eid al-Adha feast.

In an official statement, the government ordered all its branches to lower the national flag to half mast.

"All celebrations all around the country should also be canceled," the statement said of the most important holiday on the Islamic calendar.

On Friday, Gadhafi made an indirect appeal for Saddam's life, telling Al-Jazeera television that Saddam's trial was illegal and that he should be retried by an international court.