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Banaan baxii ugu weynaa oo ka dhacay W/magaalada Muqdisho

 

Mogadishu - 06-June-2006-Allceeldheer.com Banaanbaxyo kacdoon ah ayaa saakay ka bilowday degmooyinka W/magaalada Muqdisho oo lagu taageerayo kulankii shalay waxgaradka iyo siyaasiyiinta beelaha Mudulood ay ku yeesheen Mowlaca Sheekh Shariif Sheekh Muxudiin, iyadoo kulankaasi laga soo saaray qodobo dhowr ah,waxaana maanta kumanaan dad ah ay isugu yimaadeen isbartiibo Koonis ee degmada C/casiis si ay u muujitaan tageerada loo hayo kulankaasi.

 

 

 

 

Banaanbaxayaasha

 

Xuseen Kadare oo ka hadlaya banaanbaxa

 

Muuse, Bashiir Raage iyo Nuur Dakhli

 

Macalin Haaruun, Nabadoonka beesha warsangali

 

Dooni meyno Maxkamado dano gaar ah laga leeyahay, dooni meyno BBC, Hornafrik, , Mudulood ha noolaado, ayaa ka mid ahaa halku dhigyo ay ku qeylinayeen kulamaan dad ah oo isugu soo baxay fagaaraha Istadiyo Konis ee W/magaalada Muqdisho, halkaasi oo qudabo kala duwan ay ka jeediyeen Mas'uuliyiin badan oo ka tirsan beelaha Mududulood.

 

Ganacsade Bashiir Raage iyo Xildhibaan Muuse Suudi oo ka hadlay dibadbaxaasi ayaa ugu horeyn ugu mahad celiyay dhamaan shacbigii ka soo qeybgalay dibadbaxaasi , iyagoo sheegay in si cad ay u taageersan yihiin kulankii shalay beelaha Mudulood ay ku yeesheen Mowlaca Sheekh Muxudiin Celi.

 

Ciise Dheere oo ka mid ah waxgaradka Beelaha Mudulood oo ka hadlay banaanbaxaasi ayaa sheegay in Shacbiga Mudulood ay jiifka ka kacaan isla markaana ay u diyaar garoobaan difaaca dhulka beesha Mudulood oo duulaan ay ku soo yihiin Beesha H/gidir oo huwan Magac Maxkamado.

 

Kumanaan dad ah oo isugu jira dhalinyaro, haween iyo caruur ayaa socod dheer ku maray wadooyinka W/magaalada Muqdisho, iyagoo ku qeylinayay halkudhigyo ay ku soo dhaweynayeen qodobo dhowr ah oo ka soo baxay kulankii shalay ka dhacay Mowlaca Sheekh Shariif Sheekh Muxudiin.

 

Midnimada beesha waa muqadas, Ha midoobo Mudulood iyo halku dhigyo ka dhan max maxakamadaha Midoobay ayay ku qeylinayeen boqolaal dad ah oo isugu soo baxay wadooyinka W/magaalada Muqdisho.

 

Baabuur ay ku xiran yihiin Sameecado ayaa baahinayay hadalo lagu kicinayo shacbiga beelaha Mudulood in ay arkaan qiyaanada dadban oo ay wataan waxa ay ku tilmaameen Rag huwan magac Maxkamado oo doonaya in dagaalo ay ku barakiciyaan Maatada Mudulood.

 

Ilaa xalay lagama jiifan gawaari iyo shacbi fara badan oo wata Sameecado kuwaasi oo aahinayay banaanbaxa maanta ka soconaya fagaaraha Stadio Koonis ee magaalada Muqdisho.

 

Jaaliyadaha beesha Mudulood ee ku dhaqan dibadaha ayaa loogu baaqay in ay taageeraan go'aanadii ka soo baxay kulankii shalay ka dhacay Xarunta Sheekh muxudiin Celi si loo badbaadiyo shacbiga Mudulood.

 

 

 

Banaanbaxyo kale ayaa ka dhacay degmooyinka Madiina, Waberi Hodon iyo Qeybo ka mid ah H/wadaan gaar ahaan Bermuud, kaasoo looga soo horjeeday Maxkamadaha midoobay.

 

Kumanaan dad ah ayaa socod dheer ku maray wadooyinka degmada Madiina ee K/mgaalada Muqdisho, iyadoo halkaasi ay qudbado ka jeediyeen siyaaasiyiin iyo waxgad ka soo jeeda beelaha Mudulood oo si weyn u taageeray go’aanadii ka soo baxay kulankii Mowlaca Sheekh Muxudiin xalay ay ku yeesheen Waxgaradka.

 

 

CNM

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Hundreds protest Islamic militia's takeover of Mogadishu

MOHAMED OLAD HASSAN

 

Associated Press

 

MOGADISHU — Hundreds gathered Tuesday in northern Mogadishu to protest an Islamic militia's takeover of the city after weeks of bloody fighting with secular warlords allegedly backed by the United States.

 

Members of the militia, which has alleged links to al-Qaeda, kept defensive positions about two kilometres from the protest, but did not move in to stop it.

 

On Monday, the militia became the first group to consolidate control over all of Mogadishu's neighbourhoods since the last government collapsed in 1991 and warlords took over, dividing the impoverished country of eight million people into a patchwork of rival fiefdoms.

 

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Tuesday's protest, though, showed it may be difficult to keep control of the capital. The protesters, most of them members of the Abgal clan, carried signs saying, “The Unity of Abgal is Sacred†and urging the militia to pull out.

 

Three of the main leaders of the secular alliance are from the Abgal clan, including former minister of commerce Muse Sudi Yalahow, who is holed up in a hospital in northern Mogadishu and reportedly trying to negotiate with the Islamic leaders.

 

The Islamic militia is gaining ground just as the UN-backed interim government struggles to assert control outside its base in Baidoa, 250 kilometres from Mogadishu. Weapons prices soared there Monday amid fears that the militia could head to Baidoa next.

 

The militia's advance is raising fears that the nation could fall under the sway of Osama bin Laden's terrorist organization.

 

Omar Jamal, director of the Somali Justice Advocacy Center in St. Paul, Minnesota, said the Islamic militia's victory in Mogadishu was a major turning point in the country's history.

 

“It is exactly the same thing that happened with the rise to power of the Taliban,†he said, adding that the extremists are “using the people's weariness of violence, rape and civil war†to gain support for a government based on Islamic law.

 

The battle between the militia and the secular alliance has been intensifying in recent months, with more than 300 people killed and 1,700 wounded — many of them civilians caught in the crossfire of grenades, machine guns and mortars.

 

Alliance leaders could not be reached for comment Monday and had likely fled Mogadishu. One of them, warlord Mohamed Dheere, was believed to be in neighbouring Ethiopia seeking reinforcements.

 

The United States is backing the secular alliance in an attempt to root out any al-Qaeda members operating in the Horn of Africa. U.S. officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue, have confirmed co-operating with the warlords. Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed, president of Somalia's transitional national government, has said Washington is funding the alliance.

 

The administration of U.S. President George W. Bush has not confirmed or denied backing the alliance, saying only that they support those who fight terror.

 

The United States has not carried out any direct action in Somalia since the deaths of 18 servicemen in a 1993 battle in Mogadishu depicted in the film Black Hawk Down.

 

The U.S. officials said recently that Islamic leaders in Mogadishu are sheltering three al-Qaeda leaders indicted in the 1998 U.S. Embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania. The same al-Qaeda cell is believed responsible for the 2002 suicide bombing of an Israeli-owned hotel in Kenya that killed 15 people and a simultaneous attempt to shoot down an Israeli airliner over Kenya.

 

The Islamic militants and their secular rivals began competing for influence in earnest after a UN-backed interim government slowly began to gain international recognition. The weak government, wracked by infighting, has not even been able to enter the capital because of the violence.

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Somali Clan Threatens Attack on Militia

 

 

Tuesday, June 06, 2006

 

MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP) - Backed by thousands of chanting supporters Tuesday, the Somali capital's largest clan threatened to attack Islamic militiamen who do not leave part of the city they seized this week in a blow to U.S. foreign policy. Protesters shouted "We don't need Islamic deception!" and "We don't want Islamic courts, we want peace!" at a rally called by the clan. The leaders of the capital's largest and historically strongest clan had controlled northern Mogadishu since 1991.

 

Islamic militiamen maintained positions about a mile from the protest but did not move to stop it.

 

The Islamic Courts Union militia on Monday drove out the fighters of a secular alliance backed by the United States, which fears that the nation of 8 million could fall under the sway of al-Qaida (website - news) .

 

The militia became the first group to consolidate control of Mogadishu since this impoverished Horn of Africa nation descended into anarchy 15 years ago.

 

But Tuesday's protest showed that the Islamic militia may have to negotiate with clan leaders to keep control of the capital.

 

"If the so-called Islamic courts don't stop invading our territories ... the country will return to civil war," said Sheik Ahmed Kadare, an elder. The clan did not give a timetable for a potential attack.

 

Tuesday's rally appeared to be an attempt to redefine the conflict in the capital as a competition between clans, rather than a religious battle, in order to build support for continued fighting if the Islamic militants do not retreat.

 

The clan leaders promised to set up new, clan-based courts in northern Mogadishu to replace those that the Islamic extremists have operated in recent years in order to raise money and goodwill for their bid to take over the country.

 

The courts have said a government based on Islamic law will restore order to Somalia.

 

U.S. officials said recently that Islamic leaders in Mogadishu are sheltering three al-Qaida leaders indicted in the 1998 U.S. Embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania. The same al-Qaida cell is believed responsible for the 2002 suicide bombing of an Israeli-owned hotel in Kenya, which killed 15 people, and a simultaneous attempt to shoot down an Israeli airliner over Kenya.

 

The U.S. officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue, have confirmed cooperating with the secular warlords defeated by the miltiamen Monday.

 

The president of Somalia's transitional national government also has said Washington is funding the secular alliance. The Bush administration has not confirmed or denied that, saying only that it supports those who fight terrorism.

 

Secular alliance leaders were on the run after Monday's capture of Mogadishu; at least two of them - Bashir Rageh and Muse Sudi Yalahow - have pledged their loyalty to their clan.

 

"Our clan has agreed to defend our land and we will fight the courts hiding under the cloak of Islam and trying to fool our people," said Rageh, who arrived at the demonstration with Yalahow, escorted by Abgal militiamen.

 

The battle between the militia and the secular alliance had been intensifying in recent months, with more than 300 people killed and 1,700 wounded - many of them civilians caught in the crossfire of grenades, machine guns and mortars.

 

The Islamic militants and their secular rivals began competing for influence in earnest after a U.N.-backed interim government slowly began to gain international recognition.

 

But the weak government, wracked by infighting, has not even been able to enter the capital because of the violence. Instead, it is operating out of a base in Baidoa, 155 miles from Mogadishu.

 

Weapons prices soared there Monday amid fears the militia could head to Baidoa next.

 

The United States has not carried out any direct action in Somalia since the deaths of 18 servicemen in a 1993 battle in Mogadishu depicted in the film "Black Hawk Down."

 

Source: AP, June 6, 2006

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