General Duke Posted July 5, 2006 Islamist[clan courts] open fire on World Cup viewers in Somalia, killing two Jul 5, 2006, 16:41 GMT printer email RSS Talkback Mogadishu - Islamist militiamen raided a cinema in central Somalia where viewers were watching a World Cup football match in contravention of Sharia law, killing two people including the cinema owner, witnesses said Wednesday. 'The Islamic militia ordered the owner to turn off the television but he refused. Then they shot him in the leg and the chest,' a local resident who identified himself only as Mohammed told Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa. A young woman was killed after the fans watching the Germany-Italy game played on Tuesday evening streamed onto the streets of Dhusa- Mareb to protest against the cinema owner's murder and express their anger at the ban. Islamic courts have introduced Sharia law, including a ban on watching World Cup football matches, since defeating secular warlords and taking control of most of the country's southern regions last month. The gunmen were apparently also angry that the fans had ignored Islamic dictates against men and women being together in public. The incident happened just a few metres from the residence of the leader of the Courts, Sheikh Hassan Dahir Aweys, a firebrand cleric wanted by the United States on terrorism charges. 'They know the law, they broke it and they were punished according to the law. We need to be disciplined because this town especially is in danger from attack by Ethiopia,' Aweys said. Dhusa-Mareb, a town bordering Ethiopia has a large Islamic militia presence. The Islamists accuse Ethiopia of sending troops across the border, a charge Addis Ababa has denied. The anarchic Horn of Africa nation has not had functional central government since the overthrow of dictator Siad Barre in 1991. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
General Duke Posted July 5, 2006 Malleyshiyada maxkamadaha oo dad ku laayey Dhuusa Mareeb Dhuusa Mareeb - 05.July.2006 Malleyshiyada maxkamadaha Islaamiga ah ee magaalada Dhuusa Mareeb ayaa habeenkii xalay falal dil ah ka geystey gudaha magaaladaas gaar ahaan goob lagu daawanayey ciyaaraha koobka kubadda cagta adduunka ee ka socda waddanka Jarmalka. Laba qof ayaa geeriyoodey kadib markii malleyshiyada maxkamaduhu ay rasaas oodda kaga qaadeen goobtii lagu daawanayey ciyaartii dhex maraysey waddamada Talyaaniga iyo Jarmalka, waxana ay maxkamaduhu amreen in aan ciyaarahaas la daawan karin. Labada qof ee geeriyootey ayaa mid kamid ah uu yahay mulkiilihii shineemada lagu daawanayey ciyaaraha kubadda cagta adduunka halka qofka kale ee geeriyoodey uu yahay haweeney. Dadweyne ka caraysan falalka ay la soo baxeen maxkamaduhu ayaa isugu soo baxay dariiqyada magaalada Dhuusa Mareeb. Magaalada Dhuusa Mareeb ee gobolka Galgaduud waxaa haatan ku sugan guddoomiyaha golaha shuurada ee dhowaan qabsaday magaalada Muqdisho, Xasan Daahir Aweys. Ma aha markii ugu horreysey ee ay maxkamaduhu geystaan falal noocan oo kale ah iyada oo ay haatan ka hor ka dhaceen kiisas kuwan la mid ah magaalooyinka Muqdisho iyo Jawhar. SBC News Desk Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Valenteenah. Posted July 6, 2006 Bummer. And the final is coming up! Do u think people will be able to resist watching it in public? This could be an opportunity for Somaliland to foster a lot of goodwill. The administration should set up outdoor screens in Hargeisa and invite their Southern brethrens to watch the final game in peace. It could generate some income for the hosts too. Just an idea. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Maf Kees Posted July 6, 2006 ^ :confused: Did I miss something here? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
N.O.R.F Posted July 6, 2006 Somalia soccer shooting arrests The Islamists made rapid advances last month The Somali gunmen who shot dead two people watching a World Cup match have been arrested and will face Islamic justice, an Islamist leader has said. Hardliner Sheikh Dahir Aweys says the killing of a cinema owner and a young girl was an accident. The gunmen could face the death penalty. The Union of Islamic Courts (UIC) controls much of southern Somalia. The World Cup broadcast ban is not official UIC policy, but some courts do not allow matches to be shown. Somalia has had no effective central government since 1991. Meanwhile, video evidence has emerged that apparently shows foreign Islamist fighters helping the UIC in its fight for control of the capital, Mogadishu and Jowhar last month. The [training] camp exists... but there are no foreigners Sheikh Sharif Ahmed The new rulers of Mogadishu have denied the persistent allegations by members of the interim government that it is in league with foreign militia. For the first time since last month's fighting, a delegation of diplomats have been in Mogadishu to try to persuade the UIC leaders to agree to the deployment of an African peacekeeping force. But the Islamists still fiercely oppose the move, requested by interim President Abdullahi Yusuf. His government is confined to the town of Baidoa and is unable to relocate to Mogadishu, now under the courts' control. The diplomats are from the Arab League, African Union and the East African regional organisation, Igad, which last month said it intended to send a peacekeeping force of Ugandan and Sudanese troops. However, a Ugandan army spokesman has said no troops would be deployed until it is safe to do so. 'Stones thrown' Mr Aweys confirmed that the gunmen from a militia loyal to the UIC had arrived to close down the cinema in the town of Dhuusa Marreeb in central Galgadud district, where a crowd had gathered to watch the Germany-Italy World Cup semi-final on Tuesday. Some of the football fans began to protest and the gunmen fired in the air in an attempt to disperse them. After this the angry crowd began to throw stones at the militia, who then fired at the demonstrators. Mr Aweys told the radio station HornAfrik that he had been talking to elders in the area - his home region - and it was agreed that those responsible for killing the football fans would be dealt with by Sharia. The Islamic courts have introduced Sharia in areas under their authority. In some places, this has included a ban on cinemas and on broadcasts of World Cup games because they have carried advertisements for alcohol. Last week, another UIC leader, Sheikh Sharif Ahmed, denied that a World Cup ban was official policy. Mr Aweys, who denies US accusations that he has links to al-Qaeda, has called on the interim government to impose Sharia law. But Mr Ahmed has offered assurances that the UIC does not want a Taleban-style state. Training camp Over the weekend, the UIC leadership distanced itself from remarks by Osama bin Laden in the al-Qaeda's leader's most recent audio tape praising efforts to create an Islamic state in Somalia. Facts and figures about life in Somalia At-a-glance Now a promotional Islamist video in Arabic depicts what appears to be foreign fighters supporting the Islamic courts in fighting last month. The video, a copy of which has been acquired by the Associated Press news agency, is done with a hand-held camera in the same style as similar films showing fighting in Iraq from the perspective of the insurgents. It shows fighting in Somalia and what appears to be armed Arabs training at a camp in Somalia. But Mr Ahmed has denied this: "This is related to misconceptions and bad information... To tell you the truth that camp, it exists as a camp - but there are no foreigners." Somalis, weary after 15 years without an effective national government, are worried about a possible new conflict between Islamist and secular forces in their country, possibly backed by Ethiopia and the US, concerned about the spread of radical Islam. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites