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Ethiopian-trained militia enter Somalia: Official!

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Ethiopian-trained militia enter Somalia: officials 2 hours, 41 minutes ago

 

 

 

Heavily armed militiamen have entered the Somali provisional capital of Jowhar from neighbouring Ethiopia to back the embattled government of President Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed, officials said as fears of a fresh conflict mounted.

 

The militias arrived in Jowhar, about 90 kilometres (55 miles) north of the capital Mogadishu, overnight Tuesday from the the Ethiopian border town of Mustahili, where they were allegedly trained by the Ethiopian army, Somali officials said.

 

Rival sides in the divided Somalia government confirmed the entry of the fighters from Ethiopia, but disagreed on their nature and the aim of their deployment.

 

The camp allied to influential parliament speaker Sharif Hassan Sheikh Aden and the powerful warlords who control Mogadishu claimed that the fighters backed Yusuf, who is supported by the Ethiopian government.

 

"Yusuf has endorsed actions that are treasonable. He is leading the occupation of his country by militiamen trained by a neighbouring country," parliamentary spokesman Omar Hasi Aden told AFP in Mogadishu.

 

"The idea is to ignite fresh violence ... Somalia is on the brink of renewed violence," added Aden, a former colonel in the regime of dictator Mohamed Siad Barre, whose 1991 ouster sparked chaos and a breakdown of central government in the Horn of Africa nation.

 

We will "bravely defend our nation from aggression by Ethiopia with the help of non-patriotic Somali politicians," he said.

 

But Deputy Information Minister Salad Ali Jelle said the deployment was legitimate and part of efforts by the transitional government to form a national army.

 

Speaking from Jowhar, he said the Mogadishu-based warlords "are not happy to see a functional national army in Somalia to enforce law and order. They are sabotaging efforts to recruit the national army."

 

Speaking in Nairobi on Monday, Somali Prime Minister Ali Mohamed Gedi said the government had a right to recruit fighters who would be trained into a standing national army.

 

Meanwhile in Mogadishu, warlords and some MPs held talks to discuss the deployment in Jowhar, which they have described as an act of war.

 

The division in the Somali government stems from a decision in June by Yusuf and Gedi to relocate to Jowhar, while the warlords maintain the Mogadishu is the bona fide capital of Somalia and refuse to recognize and decision made by Yusuf's team.

 

Both sides have traded accusations of plotting to attack each other, but without presenting evidence.

 

Influential and often confrontational Mogadishu cleric, Shiekh Hassan Dahir Aweys, warned Yusuf against sparking a new war in Somalia, which is been ravaged by interclan fighting, usually spawned by territorial control.

 

"The newly founded government is creating more confusion to Somali politics let alone bringing peace," Aweys said.

 

"It is more appropriate this time to call for the Somalis from dictatorial tendencies of few personalities and the long-standing ill-intentions of Ethiopia against Somalia," he added.

 

Ties between the two poor Horn of African neighbours have been strained since Mogadishu lost its bid to reclaim the vast ****** region, populated by ethnic Somalis, from Ethiopia during the 1977-78 war.

 

 

Copyright © 2005 Agence France Presse. All rights reserved. The information contained in the AFP News report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior written authority of Agence France Presse.

 

 

Copyright © 2005 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.

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