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Ethiopian jets strike
Somali airports
December 25, 2006
Ethiopian warplanes attacked two Islamist-held airfields in Somalia on Monday,
witnesses said, wounding at least one person and further escalating a conflict
that threatens to engulf the Horn of Africa in war.
The attacks came the morning after Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi
formally declared war on the Islamists, saying he was protecting his nation's
sovereignty against a movement Addis Ababa accuses of being run by terrorists.
A MiG fighter struck the capital Moghadishu's international airport with
machine-gun fire, injuring a cleaning lady, the airport's managing director,
Abdirahim Adan, told Reuters. He said reports a bomb had fallen were wrong.
Three MiGs later attacked Somalia's biggest military airfield Baledogle, about
100 km (60 miles) west of Mogadishu.
"They are targeting the runway and I can see it being hit," said an Islamist
fighter who asked not to be named.
A week of fighting between Islamists and Somalia's Ethiopian-backed government
has intensified long-running hostilities.
Addis Ababa and the United States say the Islamists, who control most of
southern Somalia after seizing Mogadishu in June, is a terrorist group backed by
Ethiopia's enemy, Eritrea.
Ethiopia has vowed to protect the Western-backed interim government which is
virtually encircled by Islamist fighters in its south-central provincial base
Baidoa.
Fighting continued for the seventh day on Monday near Daynunay, outside Baidoa,
between fighters loyal to the Somalia Islamic Courts Council (SICC) and
government troops backed by Ethiopian tanks, artillery and air strikes.
In Baidoa, the virtually powerless interim government said it was closing all of
Somalia's land, sea and air borders.
Government spokesman Abdirahman Dinari said the administration approved of
Ethiopia's attack on the airport.
"Anywhere terrorists use to bring in arms and ammunition deserves to be hit," he
said.
ETHIOPIANS TAKE TOWN
The interim government's prime minister, Ali Mohamed Gedi, told Reuters 8,000
foreign fighters had poured into Somalia to back the Islamists. He concurred
with a recent U.S. accusation the Islamists' top echelon was being controlled by
al Qaeda.
The Islamists accused Ethiopia of targeting civilians.
"The airport is used mainly by civilian flights," said Abdi Kafi, a senior SICC
official. "This latest attack has come at time when so many people are traveling
to attend haj. It is a shocking attack."
There was no immediate word from Addis Ababa.
Residents of Baladwayne town, north of Baidoa, said Ethiopian troops had taken
control on Monday after aerial bombing raids on Sunday to drive out the
Islamists.
"We heard gunfire on the north side of town," one local, Abdi Nur, said by
telephone. "Then they got closer. I saw Ethiopian tanks going down the road."
Local businessman Hassan Ahmed said the shooting had stopped around Baladwayne
early on Monday and that the Islamists appeared to be regrouping in hills to the
east, he said.
Both sides say they have killed hundreds of opponents, although there has been
no independent verification.
Somalia's ambassador to Ethiopia said government forces had killed 500 Islamist
troops, most of them Eritreans.
The Islamists claim broad popular support and say their main aim is to restore
order to Somalia after years of anarchy.
Addis Ababa, which has intervened in the past to attack Islamic radicals in
Somalia, fears a hardline Muslim state on its doorstep and specifically accuses
the SICC of wanting to annex Ethiopia's ethnically Somali Ogaden region.
U.N. experts said recently 10 different countries were illegally arming both
sides.
Source: The Associated Press
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Last updated: 11/12/06.