Somalia fighting kills 6
| Published: Friday, 13 July, 2007, 01:54 AM Doha Time |
MOGADISHU:
Mounting violence killed at
least six people yesterday
in Somalia’s capital
Mogadishu ahead of a major
peace meeting at the
weekend, residents said.
Three people died in a
seventh day of battles
between troops and suspected
Islamist rebels in the
city’s sprawling Bakara
Market, while the bodies of
three other civilians, all
with bullet holes in their
heads, were dumped at a busy
intersection.
The latest bloodshed
followed an overnight
barrage of mortar bombs -
the first fired in the
chaotic capital for weeks -
that slammed into the
hilltop Villa Somalia
presidential palace and the
proposed site of Sunday’s
reconciliation conference.
Witness Mohamed Abdullahi
said the shootout in Bakara
between interim government
troops, police and suspected
Islamist insurgents also
wounded five people,
including one policeman.
“Three people died,” he
said. “Two died from a
grenade blast while the
third was shot dead by
police.”
Relatives of the three other
victims said gunmen herded
them from their homes before
killing them.
“They were tied together and
shot in the head,” said Abdi
Abdulle, a relative of one
of the dead men. “They were
ordinary people working
together in a ration store.
This is inhuman.”
Nearby, suspected insurgents
also fired rockets at a
police station in the city’s
Hodan neighbourhood, police
said.
“Heavy fighting ensued
before they ran away,”
senior police commander Ali
Nur said. “We later captured
two of them.”
The latest violence came
shortly after President
Abdullahi Yusuf’s interim
government said it would
push ahead with a
twice-postponed
reconciliation conference
seen as key to establishing
peace in the Horn of Africa
nation.
Some 1,355 clan elders,
ex-warlords and politicians
from across the country have
been invited to attend on
Sunday.
“Even if a nuclear bomb
explodes in Mogadishu, the
conference will happen as
scheduled,” local media
quoted Yusuf as saying
yesterday.
Nairobi-based diplomats
following Somalia say they
expect Sunday’s start to be
little more than a formal
opening, to buy more time to
organise the meeting and
assemble delegates. –
Reuters

