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Somali
Islamists urge foreigners to join 'jihad'
December 24, 2006
Somali Islamists urged foreign
Muslim fighters on Saturday to join their "holy war" against Ethiopia after days
of heavy fighting between Islamist and pro-government troops.
The Islamists and pro-Somali government fighters have been firing artillery and
rockets at each other across frontlines since Tuesday, killing dozens and
wounding hundreds. Though residents reported a lull in fighting early on
Saturday.
"Our country is open to Muslims worldwide. Let them fight in Somalia and wage
jihad, and God willing, attack Addis Ababa," said Islamisti defense chief Yusuf
Mohamed Siad "Inda'ade", a hard-liner known for his belligerent rhetoric.
"We told the world to stop this problem. We told them to do something before it
becomes a blazing fire that would engulf the region," he told reporters in the
Islamist stronghold of Mogadishu.
The most sustained fighting to date between the two sides has heightened fears
of a major regional war that would suck in Horn of Africa rivals Ethiopia and
Eritrea.
Diplomats fear the Somali conflict could also trigger suicide bombings in east
Africa.
Ethiopia poured scorn on the Islamists' call for international support from
foreign jihadists, saying it proved the "extremism" of a movement Addis Ababa
accuses of being run by militants linked to al Qaeda.
"If wishes were horses, the extremists in the Islamic Courts Union would have
attacked Addis Ababa by now," Foreign Ministry spokesman Ambassador Solomon
Abede told Reuters.
"Their declaration appealing to foreign Muslim fighters to help in war against
Ethiopia proves their extremist behavior."
APPEALS FOR PEACE
Residents reported quiet across the two main fronts near the government's
encircled base at Baidoa early Saturday. The Islamists said they took over
Tiyeglow late on Friday, meeting no resistance in the town some 70 km (45 miles)
southwest of Baidoa.
The Islamists took power in Mogadishu and across a swathe of southern Somalia in
June, challenging the Western-backed interim government's aspiration to restore
central rule for the first time since a military dictator was toppled in 1991.
This week's combat started after Tuesday's expiry of a deadline the Somalia
Islamic Courts Council (SICC) had given Ethiopian troops protecting the
government to leave the country or face war.
The African Union added its voice on Saturday to U.N. and Western condemnation
of the fighting and urged both sides to resume peace talks.
The SICC accuses Christian-led Ethiopia, a U.S. ally in its war on terrorism, of
invading Somalia and has said it would wage holy war against the dominant Horn
of Africa power.
Washington says the Islamists are led by an al Qaeda cell, which the
military-religious movement denies.
Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden has publicly encouraged jihadists to join such a
war.
Military experts estimate Ethiopia has 15,000-20,000 troops in Somalia, while
Eritrea has about 2,000 behind the Islamists.
Asmara denies the accusation, while Addis Ababa admits only having a few hundred
military trainers in Baidoa.
Source: The Associated Press
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Last updated: 11/12/06.