Monday, January 08, 2007

Gunmen attack Ethiopian forces

MOGADISHU, Somalia -- Gunmen attacked Ethiopian troops supporting the Somali government Sunday, witnesses said, in the second straight day of violence in a city struggling to emerge from more than a decade of chaos.

On guard: An Ethiopian soldier watches over a street in Mogadishu, Somalia. Patrols were stepped up Sunday in response to protests. - MOHAMED SHEIKH NOR / Associated Press
Farah Abdi Hussein, who witnessed the attack, said gunmen launched grenades at Ethiopians about 21/2 miles from the airport.
The unrest comes at a precarious time for Somalia's transitional administration, which is trying to assert control for the first time in a capital that has seen little more than chaos in the 15 years since clan warlords toppled a dictatorship and then turned on one another.
The government, backed by Ethiopia's military, drove out a radical Islamic militia last week. But many in predominantly Muslim Somalia resent the presence of troops from neighboring Ethiopia, which has a large Christian population and has fought two wars with Somalia.
On Saturday, hundreds of furious protesters took to the streets, burning tires and smashing car windows while denouncing the presence of Ethiopian forces and shouting defiance at the Somali government's call for disarming Mogadishu.
Two people died in Saturday's violence, including a 13-year-old boy.
On Sunday, a similar protest took place about 215 miles away in Belet Weyne, after Ethiopian troops there detained a Somali military commander who refused to hand over an Islamic militiaman, witnesses said. That protest also turned violent, killing a 20-year-old civilian, Abdi Nor Salah Gedi told The Associated Press by phone.
It was not clear who shot the man or the teenager killed Saturday.
Clan elders held emergency meetings Sunday, and hundreds of Somali troops patrolled Mogadishu.
Dahir Abdi Kulima, a chieftain of the Hawiye, the dominant clan of southern Somalia, said the government's reliance on Ethiopia is backfiring.
"Since the Ethiopians arrived, people are sleeping and waking with worry about what will happen next," Kulima said.

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