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SOMALIA: Family killed in Somali clashes

Posted by warvictims on June 20, 2008

By BBC NEWS

A mother and two children are among 25 people and 13 civilians, killed in fierce fighting in the Somali capital, Mogadishu, witnesses say.

They were killed when a mortar shell landed on their house, neighbours said. The fighting began when 100 insurgents armed with rocket-propelled grenades attacked three government and Ethiopian bases south of the city.

An Islamist spokesman told the BBC they had killed 10 Ethiopian troops, while two of their men had died.

Ethiopia, which sent troops to Somalia in 2006 to oust Islamists from Mogadishu, has not commented on these claims.

Eyewitnesses say the civilians were killed when Ethiopian troops fired shells in response to the attack by Islamist fighters.

“The insurgents came with minibuses and other vehicles and immediately started firing at an Ethiopian base at the former defence ministry building and nearby government military base,” said local resident Abdi Wahab Kalil.

The insurgents have also attacked Mogadishu’s main football stadium, which is now the main Ethiopian military base in the city.

“It was a horrific scene, and we collected the flesh of their bodies which was stuck to the walls,” said Sahara Aden Samow, who lives in the Hamarjadiid district, where several Ethiopian mortars landed.

Ceasefire

Staff at Mogadishu’s Medina hospital said they took in 18 wounded people, including six children.

“Most of the wounded were brought here early this morning, because they could not have an access to the hospitals, they are now under treatment,” said one doctor, Dahi Dheere.

Despite a ceasefire signed last week between the government and an opposition bloc, fighting has continued between government forces and insurgent groups.

On Wednesday, two policemen were killed in an attack which occurred a few minutes after a convoy carrying President Abdullahi Yusuf had driven past.

The latest truce was signed by a top Islamist leader, Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed, and Prime Minister Nur Adde, but another Islamist leader has promised to continue fighting.

The three-month ceasefire provides for Ethiopian troops to leave the country within 120 days.

Ethiopian troops have been in Somalia for 18 months since helping the government oust the Union of Islamic Courts (UIC) that ruled much of Somalia in 2006.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7465021.stm