MOGADISHU, Somalia - Islamic insurgents rained down mortars, rocket-propelled
grenades and machine-gun fire on government-allied troops Friday, a day after
the government began an offensive to quash the growing insurgency.
Somali insurgents raise their AK-47 rifles in celebration as
they roam through Shirkole neighbourhood in Mogadishu March 29, 2007.
[Reuters]
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Hundreds of soldiers from
neighboring Ethiopia, who are here to protect the fragile Somali government,
were under withering attack early Friday.
"Ethiopian troops using tanks are in fierce face-to-face fighting with
hundreds of Somali gunmen since dawn," said Khalif Mohamed Mumin, who was
abandoning his home in search of safety. "Residents are fleeing in all
directions to escape the shelling."
A day earlier, fighting killed at least 10 people and wounded 50. Bloodied
civilians were seen running through the streets of Mogadishu.
Somalia government, with crucial support from Ethiopian troops, only months
ago toppled the Council of Islamic Courts, the militia that had controlled
Mogadishu for six months.
But insurgents with links to the Islamic group have staged attacks nearly
every day on government and Ethiopian troops. Last week, a cargo plane carrying
equipment for African Union peacekeepers here was shot down by a missile during
takeoff, killing the 11-person crew.
The United States has accused the Islamic group of having ties to al-Qaida.
On Thursday, a White House report said that despite recent setbacks to Islamic
radicals in Somalia, foreign terrorists still are able to find a haven there
because of the country's lack of governance, which contributes to a growing
security threat throughout East Africa.
The report, submitted to relevant congressional committees, said several
al-Qaida operatives have used Somalia as a base of operations, including the
perpetrators of the 1998 bombings of two US embassies in East Africa and the
2002 attacks against an Israeli airliner and a hotel in Kenya.
"The individuals pose an immediate threat to both Somali and international
interests in the Horn of Africa," the report said.
The UN's refugee agency said 57,000 people have fled violence in the Somali
capital since the beginning of February, including more than 10,000 people who
fled the city in the last week.
The figures were based on information provided by non-governmental
organizations in Somalia, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees said.