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By Robert Walker
BBC News
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Ethiopian troops entered Mogadishu in December
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A member of Somalia's transitional
government has accused Ethiopian troops in the capital Mogadishu of
committing genocide since arriving in December.
The accusations came from Hussein Aideed - a former Somali
warlord who is the deputy prime minister of the transitional
government.
Ethiopia dismissed Mr Aideed's comments as an absolute
fabrication.
Hundreds of people have been killed and thousands forced to flee
since Ethiopian troops arrived in Mogadishu.
The Ethiopians arrived at the request of the transitional
government, to oust the Islamist militia that was then in control.
Swelling ranks
The comments of Hussein Aideed underline not only the deep
divisions within Somalia's transitional government but also the
strength of opposition in the Somali capital to the Ethiopian forces
backing it.
Mr Aideed is a former warlord and an influential member of the
Hawiye clan - the dominant clan in Mogadishu.
His comments calling on the Ethiopians to leave signal his
effective defection from the government to join the swelling ranks
of the opposition.
Ethiopia sent its troops into Somalia last year to help the
interim government drive out the Union of Islamic Courts (UIC) - the
Islamist movement that had taken control of the capital and much of
the south of Somalia.
But the armed opposition to Ethiopian forces now goes beyond the
remnants of the UIC.
It includes militias from the Hawiye clan - and they are
supported by a groundswell of popular anger towards the Ethiopians.
Many in Mogadishu are opposed to any foreign military presence -
and view neighbouring Ethiopia in particular as a longstanding
rival.
An offensive by Ethiopian troops in Mogadishu last month has only
increased that opposition.
Hundreds were killed and tens of thousands more were forced to
flee in some of the heaviest fighting since the central government
collapsed 16 years ago.