Ethiopia takes war against Islam into Somalia

MrBishop

Well-Known Member
MOGADISHU, Somalia (Reuters) -- A joint force of Ethiopian and Somali government troops advanced Wednesday to just 18 miles (30 kilometers) from Islamist-held Mogadishu, but a representative said they would besiege the Somali capital rather than attack it.

"We are not going to fight for Mogadishu, to avoid civilian casualties. Our troops will surround Mogadishu until they [the Islamists] surrender," Ambassador Abdikarin Farah told reporters in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

Earlier, pro-government forces seized the key southern town of Jowhar from their Islamist rivals before taking Balad, north of Mogadishu. (Watch as Ethiopia says Islamist militias are on the run )

Many residents left their houses to cheer the victors, backed by Ethiopian tanks, who pursued the retreating Islamists as sporadic gunfire echoed in the air.

The rapid offensive came hours after Ethiopia, defending the Somali interim government, said it was halfway to crushing the Islamists, heightening fears its next step would be to use airstrikes and ground troops to seize the capital.

In a hastily convened session, the African Union demanded all foreign players, including Ethiopia, immediately withdraw their forces from Somalia.

"We appeal for urgent support for the transitional government and the withdrawal of all troops and foreign elements," AU chairman Alpha Omar Konare said in a statement.

An AU-led mission would visit Somalia soon, he said.

Fears of regional war

A week of mortar duels between Islamists and the Ethiopian-backed secular government has spiraled into open war that threatens to engulf the Horn of Africa, possibly attracting foreign jihadists.

Ethiopian Information Minister Berhan Hailu said Addis Ababa began the offensive at the request of the interim Somali government -- and was also ensuring its own security.

"Ethiopian troops are fighting to protect our sovereignty from international terrorist groups and anti-Ethiopian elements," he told Reuters. "Ethiopia has said time and again its forces will withdraw as soon as they end their mission."

Ethiopia accuses neighbor Eritrea of supporting the Islamists and said it has taken foreign prisoners of war.

Ethiopia has proved more than a match for the Islamist fighters, who are driven by religious fervor but lack the MiG fighter jets and long experience of one of Africa's most effective armies.

Even so, any Ethiopian-led offensive on Mogadishu, a city of 2 million people, would likely be messy.

The retreating Islamists appeared to be heeding a call by their senior leader, Sheikh Sharif Ahmed, for forces to gather in Mogadishu to prepare for a long war against Ethiopia.

Analysts say a tactical retreat by the Islamists may draw Ethiopian soldiers further into Somalia and trigger off a lengthy guerrilla campaign on the Islamists' home turf.

The Somalia Islamic Courts Council has depicted the conflict with Christian-led Ethiopia as a holy war against "crusaders," tapping into popular anti-Ethiopian sentiment after decades of rivalry between the two neighbors.

Ethiopia has portrayed it as a war against al Qaeda-linked terrorists, winning tacit support from Washington, which believes Islamic militants are hiding in Somalia.

Stalemate at U.N. Security Council

Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi says his forces have killed up to 1,000 Islamist fighters and wounded 3,000, but there is no independent verification.

The Islamists say they have killed hundreds.

Although the government risks prolonging the war by besieging Mogadishu, the alternative is less attractive.

More than a decade ago, U.S. forces backed by Black Hawk helicopters suffered a humiliating defeat at the hands of militiamen attacking from the city's maze of back alleys.

Mindful of the historical precedent, Ethiopia will want to avoid getting embroiled in street-to-street fighting.

Analysts say another possible threat to the Islamists is Somali gunmen once in the employ of the capital's ousted warlords, whose loyalty to the Somalia Islamic Courts Council could be tested.

More than 800 people have been wounded, and thousands are fleeing the combat zone, according to the Red Cross.

The United Nations has warned that the displacement could trigger an aid crisis in a region already struggling with the aftermath of severe flooding.

The international community is split on the war. Washington has said Ethiopia has genuine security concerns in Somalia and is responding to a request from the legitimate Somali government.

The U.N. Security Council failed late Tuesday to agree on a statement calling for an immediate halt to the fighting and was due to hold further consultations on Wednesday.

There was a deadlock after Qatar, the council's sole Arab member, insisted the appeal also demand the immediate withdrawal of Ethiopian and all other forces from Somalia.

Link
 
Oh yeah, there you go... don't attack the city so that civilians don't die from errant bullets and bombs... besiege the city so civilians die from starvation. Sounds like a plan, man.
 
This is closer to a religious war than most you'd find, even though it's made to look like a war against terrorists from one side and a war against greedy invaders from the other. :shrug:
 
A Somali Islamic Courts defence chief has for the first time called on foreign Muslim fighters to join his movement's war against Ethiopia.

"We're saying our country is open to Muslims worldwide. Let them fight in Somalia and wage jihad, and God willing, attack Addis Ababa," Yusuf Mohamed Siad, known as Inda'ade, said.

"Today the war is being fought by land and air," Sheikh Mahmud Ibrahim Suley, an SICS official, told reporters in Mogadishu.

"We want anyone who can help remove the enemy to come in," he told a news conference in the Mogadishu, the Somali capital and an Islamic Courts stronghold.

"Our Islamic fighters have taken control of Idale and are heading to other parts where Tigray (Ethiopian) invaders are now based, by the will of Allah, we will liberate our people and country from the Ethiopian invaders," Islamic Courts Information chief Abdurahim Ali Muddey said the AFP.

"We are at war with Ethiopia, but not with the government," Sheikh Hassan Dahir Aweys, the Islamic Courts leader said on Thursday.

Somalia's Islamic courts on Monday, June 5, claimed victory over a US-backed warlord alliance after four months of fierce fighting in the capital Mogadishu that claimed the lives of hundreds as the interim government invited the courts to take part in dialogue.

"The Joint Islamic Courts are not interested in a continuation of hostilities and will fully implement peace and security after the change has been made by the victory of the people with the support of Allah," its chairman Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed said in a statement cited by Agence France-Presse (AFP).

He said fighters loyal to the Islamic courts have seized the capital Mogadishu from the US-backed Alliance for the Restoration of Peace and Counter-Terrorism (ARPCT).

"The JIC will take care of the safety of the people and freedom of individuals and will eradicate any sort of hostilities brought about by inter-clan fighting," said Sheikh Ahmed

http://islamfirst-muqatil.blogspot.com
 
The Islamic council is making it sound as if this is an attack directly against Islam by the Christians from Ethiopia.
The Ethiopians are making it sound like it's a war against terrorism.

The real reason for the war? :shrug:
 
The Islamic Council makes anything against Muslims an attack on Islam.
 
I have yet to see a news story giving it any serious attention. I guess theres no oil, money, opium fields, spice channel, or viagra manufacturing plants there.

If anything, it might cut down on certain forms of spam emials.
 
Somali government troops entered Mogadishu unopposed today, hours after an Islamist movement that tried to establish a government based on Sharia law abandoned the capital.

The retreat of Somalia Council of Islamic Courts (SCIC) fighters was followed by looting by clan militiamen, a reminder of the chaos that once ruled Mogadishu. One resident said three men and a woman had been killed in the looting. Gunfire could he heard in many parts of the city

"We are in Mogadishu," the Somali prime minister, Mohamed Ali Gedi, said after meeting with clan leaders to discuss the handover of the city. "We are coordinating our forces to take control of Mogadishu."

Mr Gedi was welcomed to the town of Afgoye by dozens of traditional leaders from Mogadishu and hundreds of government and Ethiopian troops who have been fighting for more than a week against the SCIC that had at one point taken over most of southern Somalia.

The Ethiopian prime minister, Meles Zenawi, vowed to inflict total defeat on the SCIC, saying that he hoped the fighting would be over "in days, if not in a few weeks".

"Forces of the transitional federal government and Ethiopia are on the outskirts of Mogadishu now," he told reporters in Addis Ababa. "We are discussing what we need to do to make sure Mogadishu does not descend into chaos. We will not let Mogadishu burn."

However, it is Mogadishu's clan leaders who have the greatest influence over whether order or lawlessness follows the SCIC retreat.

The Somali president, Abdullahi Yusuf, said in a statement that his troops were not a threat to the people of Mogadishu.

"The government is committed to solving every problem that may face Somalia through dialogue and peaceful ways," the statement said.

Sheik Sharif Ahmed, the executive SCIC leader, told al-Jazeera television that he ordered his forces out of Mogadishu, which they have occupied since June, to avoid bloodshed in the capital. Residents living south of Mogadishu said they saw convoys of Islamist fighters driving south towards the port city of Kismayo.

"I have seen that the Islamists are defeated. I'm going to rejoin my clan," said Mohamed Barre Sidow. "I was forced to join the Islamic courts by my clan, so now I will return to my clan and they will decide my fate, whether I join the government or not."

Yusuf Ibrahim, an Islamist gunman until today, said around 3,000 hardcore followers decided to continue fighting against the government and Ethiopian troops and had left for Kismayo.

Other witnesses reported seeing a large number of foreign fighters in the convoys heading south. There were suggestions they were headed for a SCIC base at the southern tip of Somalia called Ras Chiamboni.

Islamist movement leaders had called on foreign Muslims to join their "holy war" against Ethiopia, a predominantly Christian nation. Hundreds were believed to have answered the call, according to reports.

Salad Gabayre, a clan militia commander in the Sinai district, said elders were calling for young men to form militias to protect their neighbourhoods.

The International Committee of the Red Cross said hospitals and other medical facilities in southern and central Somalia had admitted more than 800 wounded people in recent days.

"The ICRC is extremely concerned about civilians caught up in the fighting, wounded people and people detained in connection with the fighting," said Pascal Hundt, the head of the ICRC's Somalia delegation. The SCIC captured Mogadishu in June and went on to take much of southern Somalia, often without fighting. Its fortunes started to reverse on Christmas Eve, when Ethiopia sent reinforcements across the border to help the internationally recognised government.

Somalia's complex clan system has been the basis of politics and identity for centuries. But due to clan fighting, the country has not had an effective government since the civil war of the 1990s. Two years ago, the United Nations helped set up the interim government. It has been unable to assert much authority, in part because it has been weakened by clan rivalries.

The competition for control of Mogadishu since 1991 has involved the Abgal and Habr Gadir clans, who joined forces earlier this year to support the Islamic Courts. If Abgal elders switch allegiance to the government, probably in return for key government posts, urban warfare between the Abgal and Habr Gadir clans is likely to resume.

The conflict has caused concern among western powers, including the United States, which has accused the Islamists of harbouring al-Qaida terrorists.

Last night, the UN Security Council failed for a second day to agree on a statement calling for an immediate ceasefire in Somalia.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,,1979362,00.htmlv
 
Last night, the UN Security Council failed for a second day to agree on a statement calling for an immediate ceasefire in Somalia.

I bet they would really mean it too.
 
War in Somalia: The Islamic Courts Union collapses in the Battle of Jilib, and flees from its last major stronghold in Kismayo towards the Kenyan border MSNBC

Ok so the obvious course of action should be.

Troops advance into Kenya and pursue them until everyone
of them is dead. Anything less is asking for trouble.
 
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